Sans Superellipse Pyned 2 is a regular weight, narrow, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, signage, data tables, packaging, posters, modern, technical, utilitarian, clean, compact, space efficiency, systematic design, functional clarity, contemporary branding, rounded corners, rectangular curves, geometric, condensed, crisp.
A condensed sans with a distinctly squarish, superellipse construction: bowls and counters read as rounded rectangles rather than true circles. Strokes are monoline and clean, with tight apertures and compact sidebearings that create a dense, efficient rhythm in text. Curves resolve into straight segments with softened corners, while terminals are generally flat and squared-off, reinforcing a structured, engineered feel. Numerals and lowercase maintain the same boxy curvature language, yielding consistent texture across mixed-content settings.
Well-suited to interface typography, product labeling, and informational layouts where space is limited and consistency is critical. The compact forms and even stroke behavior also work for signage, charts, and tabular or dashboard-style composition, and can scale up effectively for bold headlines with a technical edge.
The overall tone is modern and technical, with a utilitarian clarity that feels at home in systems, interfaces, and wayfinding. Its compactness and squared rounding suggest precision and restraint rather than friendliness, giving it a pragmatic, contemporary voice.
The design appears intended to deliver a space-efficient sans with a distinctive rounded-rectangle geometry, prioritizing uniformity and a controlled rhythm for contemporary digital and graphic applications. Its consistent construction and compact fit suggest an emphasis on systematic branding and functional typography.
The squircle geometry is especially evident in round letters like C, O, Q, and G, and it carries through to punctuation and numerals for a cohesive palette. The tight internal spaces and narrow stance emphasize verticality and economy, producing a strong, high-density typographic color in paragraphs and labels.