Sans Superellipse Arred 5 is a very light, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, tech branding, signage, posters, product design, futuristic, minimal, clinical, techy, geometric, modernization, ui clarity, systematic design, tech aesthetic, geometric consistency, rounded, rectilinear, open counters, soft corners, constructed.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle strokes and consistent corner radii, producing a clean, modular silhouette. Strokes are even and fine, with squared terminals softened by generous rounding, and bowls that read as superelliptical rather than purely circular. Spacing is open and airy, with large apertures and simplified joins that keep forms crisp at display sizes. The lowercase maintains a straightforward, constructed rhythm, with single-storey forms and a notably simple, monoline ‘g’ and ‘a’, reinforcing the engineered feel.
Works well for user-interface labels, dashboards, and wayfinding where a modern, orderly voice is desired. It also suits tech-forward branding, packaging, and editorial display settings that benefit from a geometric, engineered personality. For longer text, it’s best used at comfortable sizes where the fine strokes and open forms remain clear.
The overall tone is sleek and contemporary, evoking interface design, digital readouts, and streamlined product aesthetics. Its rounded corners temper the technical geometry, adding a friendly softness without losing precision. The result feels futuristic and controlled, more laboratory-clean than expressive or nostalgic.
This design appears intended to translate a rounded-rect, device-like geometry into a versatile alphabet, prioritizing consistency, clarity, and a contemporary digital mood. The constructed shapes and simplified detailing suggest a focus on modern display and interface contexts rather than traditional typographic calligraphy.
Several glyphs lean on distinctive, schematic details—such as angular diagonals and V-like junctions—giving the alphabet a techno signature while staying highly consistent in stroke logic. Numerals echo the same rounded-rect geometry, keeping a uniform visual system across letters and figures.