Sans Superellipse Emres 3 is a light, wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, app branding, tech posters, headlines, wayfinding, futuristic, technical, sleek, modern, dynamic, modernize, add motion, signal tech, differentiate, geometric, rounded, oblique, monoline, extended.
A monoline, oblique sans with extended proportions and a geometric construction rooted in rounded-rectangle curves. Strokes stay even and clean, with gently softened terminals and consistently rounded joins that keep the texture smooth and uniform. Counters tend toward squarish ovals, and many curves read as superelliptical rather than perfectly circular, producing a crisp, engineered rhythm. The overall color is light and airy, with open spacing and a forward slant that emphasizes horizontal flow.
Best suited to display and interface contexts where a modern, streamlined voice is desired—product UI, dashboards, device packaging, tech and mobility branding, and concise headlines. It can also work for short editorial standfirsts or captions when you want a clean, contemporary italic tone, though long-form reading may benefit from larger sizes and generous line spacing.
The design feels contemporary and tech-oriented, with a streamlined, aerodynamic tone. Its rounded geometry softens the engineering vibe, creating an approachable modernism rather than a hard industrial look. The italic angle adds motion and urgency, suggesting speed, UI polish, and forward-looking branding.
The font appears designed to combine a futuristic, geometric skeleton with friendly rounding, delivering a distinctive oblique voice for modern communication. Its consistent monoline construction and superelliptical forms suggest an intention to feel engineered and contemporary while remaining approachable and legible in branding and interface applications.
The slant is consistent across caps, lowercase, and numerals, and the wide set helps maintain clarity at smaller sizes in short strings and labels. Rounded corners and squarish bowls give distinctive silhouettes in letters like O/Q and in numerals, while keeping a cohesive, system-like character across the set.