Sans Superellipse Boril 8 is a very light, narrow, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, ui labels, posters, branding, packaging, minimal, airy, contemporary, technical, elegant, modernist clarity, geometric system, refined display, space efficiency, interface tone, monoline, condensed, geometric, rounded, superelliptical.
A monoline sans with condensed proportions and a distinctly geometric, superelliptical construction. Curves resolve into rounded-rectangle shapes (notably in O/C/G and the bowls of b/d/p/q), while verticals stay straight and clean. Terminals are crisp and unadorned, joins are orderly, and counters are generous for the width. The overall rhythm is even and architectural, with long ascenders/descenders and a streamlined, slightly mechanical spacing in both caps and lowercase.
Best suited to display settings where its thin, condensed build can feel intentional: headlines, short subheads, UI labels, and refined brand systems. It can work well for packaging, editorial titling, and tech or architecture-adjacent communications where a clean geometric voice is desired; for longer text, it benefits from comfortable sizes and ample line spacing.
The tone is cool and restrained, suggesting precision and modernity rather than warmth or nostalgia. Its thin strokes and compact width create a refined, high-end feel that reads as sleek and quietly futuristic.
The design appears aimed at a minimalist geometric voice that blends rounded-rectangle curves with strict vertical structure. It prioritizes a sleek silhouette, consistent stroke logic, and a contemporary, systematized character for modern identities and interface-oriented typography.
Uppercase forms are simple and disciplined, with a narrow, tall stance; diagonal letters (A, V, W, X, Y) are sharply drawn and keep the same linear weight. Numerals follow the same rounded-rectangle logic, with a clean, modern 2/3 and a simple, open 4. The lowercase includes single-storey a and g, reinforcing the geometric system.