Sans Superellipse Pyrej 5 is a regular weight, narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui, app design, dashboards, signage, headlines, modern, techy, minimal, futuristic, clean, space saving, systematic look, interface clarity, modern branding, geometric consistency, rounded corners, condensed, geometric, superelliptic, crisp.
A compact, monoline sans with tall proportions and a restrained, geometric construction. Curves resolve into rounded-rectangle (superellipse-like) forms, giving bowls and counters a slightly squared softness rather than pure circles. Terminals are clean and mostly flat, with occasional rounded corners; joins are straightforward and mechanically consistent. The spacing and rhythm feel tight and efficient, and many letters show simplified, modular shapes that stay highly uniform across the set.
Well suited to interface typography, product UI, dashboards, and compact labeling where a clean, system-like rhythm is helpful. It can also work effectively for short headlines, posters, and wayfinding that benefit from a modern, slightly futuristic tone. Its condensed proportions make it useful when horizontal space is limited.
The overall tone is contemporary and engineered, with a quietly futuristic feel. Its rounded-rectilinear curves and narrow stance read as technical and UI-minded, while the softened corners keep it from feeling harsh. The vibe lands between minimalist signage and sci‑fi interface typography.
Likely designed to deliver a sleek, space-efficient sans with a distinctive rounded-rect geometry, balancing strict modular construction with softened corners for approachability. The aim appears to be a contemporary, technical voice that stays consistent across letters and figures for practical digital and signage applications.
Distinctive superelliptic O/Q forms and squared-off curves create a strong systemized identity in both caps and lowercase. The numerals follow the same compact, rounded-rect geometry, maintaining consistency for data-heavy settings. The design’s uniform stroke and tight proportions favor clarity at display and interface sizes over warmth or calligraphic personality.