Sans Superellipse Habel 2 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Bio Sans' and 'Bio Sans Soft' by Dharma Type, 'Cairoli Classic' by Italiantype, and 'PG Grotesque' by Paulo Goode (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, branding, signage, ui labels, posters, modern, clean, confident, friendly, utilitarian, clarity, modernization, approachability, versatility, impact, geometric, rounded, compact, crisp, even.
A contemporary sans with sturdy, even strokes and a geometric skeleton that leans on rounded-rectangle (superellipse) curves. Counters are open and fairly generous for the weight, with smooth joins and minimal stroke modulation. Terminals are clean and mostly flat, while curves stay controlled and slightly squared, giving round letters a structured, engineered feel. Proportions are balanced with a steady rhythm across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals, and the overall texture reads dense and solid without feeling cramped.
Works well for headlines and bold branding where a clean, contemporary voice is needed. The robust shapes and open counters also make it suitable for signage and UI labels, especially for short strings, navigation, and button text. In editorial or marketing layouts, it can deliver a strong, modern typographic anchor for titles, callouts, and subheads.
The tone is modern and matter-of-fact, projecting clarity and confidence with a subtly friendly softness from its rounded geometry. It feels pragmatic and contemporary rather than expressive or decorative, suited to straightforward communication where presence and legibility are priorities.
The design appears intended to blend geometric discipline with approachable rounding, creating a versatile sans that feels engineered yet friendly. Its consistent stroke weight and structured curves suggest a focus on reliable legibility and a contemporary, product-forward aesthetic.
The sample text shows strong word-shape stability and consistent spacing, producing a smooth typographic color at display sizes. Numerals match the letterforms in weight and geometry, maintaining the same rounded-rectilinear logic in bowls and curves.