Sans Superellipse Dylo 7 is a light, wide, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: branding, headlines, editorial, posters, ui, modern, elegant, clean, airy, architectural, geometric clarity, softened modernism, premium minimalism, legible display, monolinear, geometric, rounded, open apertures, long extenders.
This typeface presents a clean geometric construction with softly squared curves and rounded-rectangle (superellipse-like) counters. Strokes are slender and crisp, with a restrained contrast that reads as refined rather than calligraphic. Proportions are generous and open: uppercase forms feel broad with ample internal space, and lowercase letters show long ascenders and descenders that create a tall, breathable vertical rhythm. Terminals are smooth and uncomplicated, and many joins avoid sharp corners in favor of gentle radii, giving the overall texture a polished, contemporary steadiness.
It will perform best in branding, headlines, and editorial settings where its airy spacing, crisp curves, and tall rhythm can be appreciated at display and medium sizes. The clean, rounded geometry also suits interface or product typography when a contemporary, premium tone is desired, provided ample size and line spacing are used to accommodate the long extenders.
The overall tone is modern and composed, combining a technical, designed feel with a subtle softness from the rounded geometry. It reads as upscale and calm, suitable for minimalist aesthetics where clarity and refinement matter more than warmth or playfulness.
The design appears intended to merge geometric clarity with softened, rounded-rectangle forms, producing a contemporary sans that feels both precise and approachable. Its proportions and open shaping suggest a focus on elegant readability and a distinctive, modern silhouette in setting and logos.
Across both the grid and text sample, spacing appears measured with consistent sidebearings, producing an even color in paragraphs. Figures and capitals maintain the same rounded-geometry logic as the letters, which helps mixed text feel cohesive and controlled.