Sans Superellipse Adlaj 13 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, app branding, signage, headlines, product design, techy, friendly, clean, futuristic, minimal, system clarity, modern branding, soft geometry, tech tone, rounded, geometric, modular, soft corners, open counters.
A geometric sans with a rounded-rectangle (superellipse) construction and consistent, even stroke weight. Corners are generously softened, terminals are squared-off rather than tapered, and curves read as controlled, engineered arcs. Proportions feel compact with relatively low lowercase height and roomy internal counters; round letters like O/C/e are closer to squarish bowls than true circles. The overall rhythm is orderly and modular, with a slightly condensed feel in some glyphs and clear, uncluttered joins throughout.
Well-suited to interface typography, product wordmarks, and short-to-medium headlines where a clean, contemporary voice is needed. The modular rounded forms also work well for wayfinding and environmental graphics, as well as packaging or tech-forward branding that benefits from a friendly, engineered look.
The tone is modern and approachable, mixing a technical, interface-like precision with soft rounded corners that keep it from feeling harsh. It suggests contemporary product design, digital systems, and streamlined signage—confident and neutral, with a subtle futuristic edge.
The design appears intended to deliver a contemporary geometric sans whose superelliptical shapes feel optimized for digital and system-oriented use, balancing strict construction with softened edges for approachability. It prioritizes a consistent texture and recognizable rounded-rect silhouette across letters and numerals.
Uppercase forms are straightforward and architectural, while the lowercase keeps a simple, utilitarian structure with single-storey shapes where applicable and minimal contrast in joints. Numerals follow the same rounded-rect geometry, maintaining consistent texture and clear separation between forms at display sizes.