Sans Superellipse Apfe 7 is a light, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, app design, wayfinding, packaging, headlines, modern, techy, clean, friendly, geometric, geometric clarity, digital tone, softened modernism, systematic consistency, rounded, monoline, superelliptic, open apertures, soft corners.
A monoline sans with superelliptic construction: bowls and counters read as rounded rectangles, while terminals are smoothly rounded and corners are softened throughout. Proportions lean horizontally, giving many glyphs a slightly expanded stance, and the rhythm is even with consistent stroke weight and minimal modulation. Curves are controlled and squared-off rather than fully circular, with generous interior space that keeps letters like O, D, and Q open and stable. The lowercase mixes simple, single-storey forms (notably a and g) with tall ascenders and clean, uncluttered joins; numerals follow the same rounded-rectangle logic for a cohesive set.
This face is well suited to interface typography, dashboards, and product branding where a clean, geometric voice is desired. It can also work for signage and short headlines, especially in contexts that benefit from rounded, modern forms and a steady, readable texture.
The overall tone is contemporary and engineered, with a calm, approachable feel created by the rounded geometry. Its squared curves and steady spacing suggest a digital or product-oriented sensibility, while the soft corners prevent it from feeling clinical.
The design appears intended to blend geometric precision with friendly softness by building letterforms from rounded-rectangle primitives and keeping strokes uniform. The goal seems to be a contemporary sans that feels systematic and digital, yet approachable for everyday text and display use.
Distinctive details include the pointed apex on the uppercase A and the angular, forked construction in letters like Y and W, which adds a subtle technical edge against the otherwise soft geometry. The ampersand is simplified and linear, matching the font’s stripped-back, systemlike character.