Sans Superellipse Arniy 7 is a very light, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, posters, ui display, tech branding, futuristic, minimal, technical, clean, sci‑fi, modernization, futurism, geometric clarity, interface tone, brand distinctiveness, geometric, rounded, superelliptic, open counters, extended.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse motifs, drawn with a consistent hairline stroke. Curves transition smoothly into straight segments, producing squared-off bowls and softly radiused corners across round letters and numerals. The proportions are horizontally extended, with generous interior space and relatively open apertures; terminals are clean and unadorned. The overall rhythm is even and airy, with simplified joins and a controlled, engineered feel rather than calligraphic contrast.
Best suited to display use such as headlines, tech or product branding, posters, and interface titling where its wide stance and superelliptic construction can be appreciated. It can also work for short UI labels or navigation elements at sufficiently large sizes, but the very thin stroke favors high-contrast rendering and restrained text lengths.
The font reads as modern and forward-looking, with a cool, device-like cleanliness. Its superelliptic geometry suggests interfaces, industrial design, and science-fiction title styling, while the thin stroke keeps the tone light and understated.
The design appears intended to translate industrial and digital product geometry into letterforms, prioritizing consistent stroke logic and rounded-rectangular curves. Its aim is a sleek, contemporary voice that feels engineered and precise while remaining friendly through softened corners.
Several forms emphasize rectilinear construction (notably rounded bowls and squared curves), creating a cohesive ‘capsule’ silhouette across letters and figures. The thin weight and extended widths make spacing and size especially influential: it appears most confident when given room and used at larger settings.