Sans Superellipse Ornoh 7 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Rice' by Font Kitchen, 'Chandler Mountain' by Mega Type, 'Nuber Next' by The Northern Block, 'Tablet Gothic' by TypeTogether, and 'Ddt' by Typodermic (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui text, product design, signage, headlines, brand systems, clean, modern, neutral, technical, friendly, clarity, systematic design, modern utility, approachability, monoline, rounded corners, compact counters, high legibility, geometric.
A clean, monoline sans with rounded-rectangle (superellipse) construction and gently softened corners throughout. Strokes are even and straight segments dominate, while curves resolve into controlled, squarish bowls rather than fully circular forms. Proportions feel fairly compact with tight, efficient counters; the uppercase is sturdy and uniform, and the lowercase maintains a straightforward rhythm with simple terminals and minimal modulation. Numerals match the same squared-round geometry, yielding consistent color and spacing in text.
Well-suited to interface typography, product and tech branding, and editorial layouts that need a crisp, contemporary sans with a slightly softened edge. The stable rhythm and compact shapes also make it effective for wayfinding, labels, and short to medium-length text where consistency and legibility are priorities.
The overall tone is modern and restrained, with a subtle friendliness coming from the rounded corners. It reads as practical and dependable rather than expressive, lending a mildly technical, contemporary feel without becoming cold.
Likely designed to deliver a contemporary geometric sans that balances strict, systematic construction with approachable rounding. The goal appears to be a versatile workhorse style that stays neutral in tone while maintaining a distinctive superellipse character in round letters and numerals.
Round forms like O/Q and bowls in B/D/P show a distinctly squarish curvature, reinforcing a systematic, engineered look. The lowercase a is single-storey and the lowercase g is simple and open, supporting clarity at display and text sizes alike.