Sans Superellipse Lisy 6 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui design, app branding, tech logos, headlines, posters, futuristic, techy, modular, clean, geometric, digital modernity, geometric consistency, interface clarity, brand distinctiveness, rounded corners, squared bowls, open apertures, soft terminals, even rhythm.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse-like forms, with consistent monoline strokes and generously rounded corners. Curves resolve into squared bowls and softly clipped terminals, producing a crisp, modular silhouette. Counters tend to be rectangular or squarish (notably in O/Q and many lowercase bowls), while apertures stay fairly open for clarity. Spacing and proportions lean expansive, giving the design a broad, steady rhythm in both caps and lowercase.
Well suited to UI labels, product branding, and tech-forward identities where a clean, geometric voice is desired. Its wide, open forms also make it effective for headlines, posters, and display settings, especially when you want a modern, engineered look with softened edges.
The overall tone feels futuristic and interface-minded—precise, engineered, and a bit sci‑fi—while the rounded corners keep it approachable rather than harsh. Its square-with-radius geometry suggests digital hardware, dashboards, and contemporary product ecosystems.
The design appears intended to translate superellipse and rounded-rectangle geometry into a coherent text-and-display alphabet. It prioritizes consistent stroke logic and modular construction, aiming for a contemporary, technology-adjacent aesthetic that remains friendly through rounded detailing.
Distinctive glyph traits include a very boxy O/Q construction, an angular V/W/X with softened joins, and a single-storey lowercase a that echoes the font’s rounded-rect geometry. Numerals follow the same squared, softened language, with straightened arcs and clear, schematic shapes.