Sans Superellipse Almom 2 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, dashboards, tech branding, signage, posters, techno, futuristic, clean, modular, precise, systematic geometry, tech aesthetic, ui clarity, cohesive family, rounded corners, squared bowls, geometric, compact, engineered.
A geometric sans built from squared-off curves and rounded-rectangle counters, giving many letters a superelliptical, boxy silhouette. Strokes are consistently even, with crisp terminals and a largely right-angled construction softened by generous corner radii. Proportions feel compact and slightly condensed in many glyphs, with tight internal spacing and neatly contained apertures that keep forms controlled and uniform. Lowercase shapes stay simple and architectural, and figures follow the same rounded-rect geometry for a highly consistent overall texture.
Well-suited to UI labels, dashboards, and product interfaces where a clean, engineered voice is desired, as well as tech branding and packaging that benefits from a futuristic edge. Its controlled geometry also lends itself to signage and poster headlines, especially in contexts that want a modern, industrial or digital flavor.
The design reads as technical and futuristic, with an engineered, modular rhythm reminiscent of interface lettering and sci‑fi display typography. Its squared curves and systematic rounding project precision and restraint rather than warmth or calligraphy, creating a confident, contemporary tone.
The letterforms appear designed to translate rounded-rectangle geometry into a practical sans with a distinctive, tech-forward signature. Consistent corner radii and uniform stroke behavior suggest an intention to keep the system cohesive across caps, lowercase, and numerals while maintaining a crisp, contemporary presence.
Distinctive rounded-square counters (notably in letters like O/Q and numerals) create a cohesive set, while angled strokes in A/V/W/X/Y add contrast to the otherwise rectilinear system. The punctuation and simple dots maintain the same no-nonsense, utilitarian feel as the letters.