Sans Superellipse Duluh 1 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Meguro Sans' by GT&CANARY, 'Obvia Expanded' and 'Obvia Wide' by Typefolio, 'Cannon' by W Type Foundry, and 'Geon' and 'Geon Soft' by cretype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui labels, app branding, signage, dashboards, packaging, modern, friendly, techy, clean, solid, ui clarity, modern branding, soft geometry, neutral utility, digital tone, rounded corners, squared curves, geometric, monoline, compact terminals.
A rounded, geometric sans built from squarish curves and superellipse-like bowls, giving counters a softly rectangular feel rather than purely circular. Strokes are largely monoline with minimal contrast and consistently rounded joins, while terminals tend toward flat cuts softened by corner radii. Proportions read open and stable, with generous interior space in letters like O, D, and P and a straightforward, unmodulated rhythm across caps and lowercase. Figures match the same rounded-rectangle logic, with clear, sturdy forms and uniform stroke behavior.
It suits interface typography, product branding, and corporate systems where a modern, rounded geometric presence is desired. The sturdy, even strokes and open counters also make it a good fit for wayfinding, dashboards, and bold headings where clarity and a friendly technical character are important.
The overall tone is contemporary and approachable, balancing a technical, UI-ready precision with softened corners that keep it from feeling harsh. Its rounded-square geometry suggests a digital or product-oriented sensibility, while the even color and simple construction maintain a calm, neutral voice.
The design appears intended to merge geometric rigor with softened, rounded-square forms, creating a sans that feels both engineered and approachable. By keeping strokes even and detailing minimal, it aims for a dependable, highly legible look that still carries a distinct superellipse signature.
Rounded corners are applied consistently across straights and curves, producing a cohesive “soft hardware” look. The lowercase includes a single-storey a and g, reinforcing the geometric, simplified construction and keeping word shapes clean at larger display sizes.