Sans Superellipse Venet 5 is a light, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Bantat' by Jipatype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui, signage, headlines, tech branding, posters, futuristic, minimal, technical, sleek, calm, modernize, systematize, soften, differentiate, rounded corners, extended, geometric, low contrast, open counters.
A clean geometric sans with extended proportions and consistently rounded-rectangle construction. Strokes are even and low-contrast, with corners softened into smooth radii rather than sharp joins, creating a superelliptic, UI-like silhouette across rounds and straights. Curves stay controlled and slightly squared-off, with open apertures and generous internal spacing that keep forms clear at display sizes. Figures echo the same rounded-rect logic, with simple, linear terminals and an overall measured rhythm.
Best suited to interface typography, product branding, and contemporary display settings where a clean, geometric voice is desired. The broad letterforms and open counters make it effective for headlines, wayfinding, and large-format graphics, and it can also work for short blocks of text where a modern, engineered aesthetic is the goal.
The overall tone feels modern and tech-forward, balancing precision with friendliness through softened corners. Its restrained, systematic shapes read as contemporary and engineered, suggesting digital interfaces, product design, and forward-looking branding rather than expressive or organic typography.
Designed to deliver a contemporary, systematized sans with a distinctive rounded-rectangle geometry—prioritizing clarity, consistency, and a recognizable tech-modern personality while staying visually neutral enough for versatile branding and interface use.
Round letters (like O/Q) appear more like rounded rectangles than pure circles, and the same geometry carries through into C/G/S for a cohesive, modular feel. Diagonals in A/V/W/X/Y remain crisp while still harmonizing with the softened corner language, giving the face a consistent, designed system across the alphabet and numerals.