Sans Superellipse Embiw 14 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Bronkoh' by Brink, 'Flexo' and 'Flexo Soft' by Durotype, and 'Akwe Pro' by ROHH (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui design, branding, headlines, signage, packaging, modern, technical, clean, dynamic, neutral, clarity, contemporary tone, system cohesion, italic emphasis, oblique, rounded, geometric, monolinear, open apertures.
A slanted, monolinear sans with softly squared, superellipse-inspired curves and rounded terminals. Curves are smooth and even, with low stroke modulation and generally open counters that keep letters readable at smaller sizes. Proportions feel contemporary and slightly condensed in places, with a steady rhythm across the alphabet; bowls and rounds lean toward rounded-rectangle geometry rather than perfect circles. The numerals follow the same oblique, geometric construction, with clear silhouettes and consistent stroke endings.
Works well for UI typography, dashboards, and product surfaces where a clean oblique sans can add emphasis without sacrificing clarity. It also suits contemporary branding, packaging, and short headlines, especially when a rounded-rect geometry can echo industrial design or app-like visual systems. For editorial or long-form settings, it reads best as an italic companion or for highlighted passages and callouts.
The overall tone is modern and efficient, with a subtle sense of motion from the consistent slant. Its rounded-square geometry adds a quiet friendliness without becoming playful, keeping the voice more technical than casual. The result feels suitable for contemporary interfaces and brand systems that want clarity with a sleek, engineered edge.
Likely designed as a contemporary oblique sans that blends geometric discipline with rounded-square forms for a distinctive, system-friendly texture. The consistent stroke behavior and open counters suggest an intention to remain legible across sizes while adding a recognizable, modern slant-driven energy.
Uppercase forms show confident, simplified joins and broad curves, while lowercase shapes maintain open apertures that help word shapes stay distinct in text. The slant is pronounced enough to read as italic/oblique, but the construction remains firmly sans and geometric. Spacing appears even in the sample paragraph, supporting smooth line flow for continuous reading.