Sans Superellipse Emguv 7 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Bronkoh' by Brink, 'FS Me' and 'FS Me Paneuropean' by Fontsmith, and 'JP Alva' by jpFonts (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui text, product design, brand systems, dashboards, headlines, modern, clean, friendly, technical, efficient, contemporary clarity, ui friendliness, forward motion, system coherence, slanted, rounded, open apertures, geometric, taut curves.
A slanted sans with smooth, superelliptical curves and softly squared rounds that keep counters compact and controlled. Strokes are even and steady, with minimal modulation, and terminals are cleanly cut, giving the letterforms a crisp, engineered finish. Proportions lean geometric while staying readable, with open apertures and roomy spacing that helps shapes stay distinct in text. The overall rhythm is orderly and consistent, with rounded bowls and streamlined joins that reinforce a contemporary, system-like look.
Works well for interface typography, dashboards, and product surfaces where a slanted voice can add motion without sacrificing legibility. It also suits contemporary brand systems, tech-facing marketing, and punchy headings that benefit from clean geometry and consistent spacing.
The tone is modern and pragmatic, mixing a friendly softness from the rounded geometry with a purposeful, forward-leaning energy. It feels efficient and contemporary rather than expressive, suited to interfaces and product communication where clarity and momentum matter.
Likely designed to provide a contemporary italic voice built on rounded geometric foundations, offering clear text performance with a subtle sense of speed and modernity. The controlled curves and consistent stroke behavior suggest an emphasis on predictable rendering across varied sizes and mixed alphanumeric content.
Uppercase forms read calm and structured, while the lowercase shows a slightly more human, utilitarian feel through simplified shapes and direct terminals. Numerals match the same rounded-rectilinear logic, producing a cohesive, UI-ready texture across mixed copy.