Sans Superellipse Dawe 7 is a light, very wide, monoline, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, tech branding, headlines, signage, product design, futuristic, techy, clean, geometric, sleek, digital aesthetic, system consistency, modern clarity, geometric identity, rounded, superelliptic, square-rounded, modular, open counters.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle (superellipse-like) strokes, with consistently softened corners and a uniform line weight. Forms lean toward squared curves rather than true circles, giving bowls and counters a compact, boxy roundness (notably in O, D, and 0). Spacing feels generous and steady in text, while widths vary across glyphs, producing a rhythm that alternates between wide, open letters (C, G, U) and tighter constructions (E, F, S). The lowercase follows the same modular logic, with single-storey a and g, simple terminals, and a clean, engineered silhouette throughout.
This style is well-suited to interface typography, dashboards, and product environments where clarity and a contemporary, engineered aesthetic are desired. It can also work effectively for tech-forward branding, short headlines, and wayfinding or environmental graphics where the rounded-square geometry reads cleanly at a range of sizes.
The overall tone is modern and forward-looking, with a distinctly digital, interface-oriented feel. Rounded corners and open interiors keep it approachable, while the squared geometry reads as precise and technical rather than humanist.
The design appears intended to translate a soft-rectangular, digital geometry into a readable sans, balancing a futuristic silhouette with open counters and steady spacing for practical use. Its modular construction suggests an emphasis on consistency across letters and numbers for system-like applications.
Several glyphs emphasize straight segments and right-angle turns softened by radius, creating a consistent “soft-squared” motif. Diagonals (K, V, W, X, Y) remain crisp and structural, contrasting with the rounded bowls, and numerals match the same rounded-rect construction for a cohesive alphanumeric set.