Sans Superellipse Runom 7 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui design, product branding, signage, packaging, headlines, modern, clean, friendly, techy, minimal, clarity, modernization, approachability, geometric cohesion, rounded, geometric, monoline, open apertures, soft corners.
This typeface is a geometric sans with softened, superelliptical construction: round letters feel like rounded rectangles rather than perfect circles. Strokes are largely monoline with gently eased terminals, producing a smooth, even rhythm. Counters are spacious and open, and many joins and curves are slightly squared-off, giving the design a crisp-yet-rounded silhouette. Uppercase forms are straightforward and stable, while the lowercase keeps a simple, utilitarian structure with single-storey shapes where expected and clear, uncluttered bowls and shoulders.
Well-suited to interface typography, dashboards, and product websites where a neutral sans with soft geometry supports clarity. It also works effectively for branding, packaging, and signage that benefit from a modern, friendly voice, and for headlines where the rounded-superellipse shapes can become part of the visual identity without feeling gimmicky.
The overall tone is contemporary and approachable—clean and efficient, but not cold. Its rounded geometry adds friendliness and a subtle tech-product feel, making it read as modern UI-forward typography rather than editorial or decorative.
The design appears intended to blend geometric precision with softer edges, delivering a contemporary sans that feels both technical and approachable. Its consistent rounded-rectangle logic suggests a goal of visual cohesion across letters and numbers, aimed at clear, modern communication in digital-first contexts.
Distinctive rounded-rectangle curves show up consistently in letters like C, G, O, and U, and in the numerals, helping the font maintain a cohesive “soft geometry” across the set. The sample text suggests comfortable readability at display and larger text sizes, with clear differentiation between many glyph shapes through open counters and simple forms.