Sans Superellipse Dulit 11 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: ui labels, coding, terminal display, dashboards, signage, techy, modular, retro, utilitarian, futuristic, systematic design, digital aesthetic, interface clarity, industrial tone, rounded corners, squared forms, geometric, boxy, stencil-like.
A geometric sans built from squared, rounded-rectangle forms, with consistently softened corners and largely uniform stroke weight. Curves are treated as superelliptic arcs rather than circles, producing boxy counters and flat-ish terminals throughout. The design keeps a steady, grid-friendly rhythm and generous internal spacing, with simplified joins and compact apertures that stay crisp at larger sizes. Numerals and capitals follow the same rounded-rect logic, emphasizing straight segments, squared bowls, and controlled curvature.
Well-suited to interface typography, dashboards, device screens, and system labeling where a consistent, grid-aligned texture is desirable. It also fits coding or terminal-style presentations, schematic captions, and tech branding that benefits from a rounded-rect, digital-industrial flavor.
The overall tone is technical and systematic, evoking digital interfaces, industrial labeling, and retro-futuristic hardware aesthetics. Its modular construction reads as engineered and functional rather than expressive, lending a calm, instrument-like presence in text.
The design appears intended to translate a rounded-rect, hardware-inspired geometry into a practical text face, prioritizing consistency and a clear modular system across letters and numbers. It aims for a recognizable, engineered look that remains steady and readable in compact, information-dense settings.
Distinctive details include squared bowls on letters like B/D/O and a strongly rectilinear treatment of curves in S, C, and G, reinforcing a consistent ‘rounded box’ theme. Lowercase forms remain simple and sturdy, with a single-storey a and g and minimal modulation, supporting a clean, mechanical texture in paragraphs.