Sans Superellipse Valow 10 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui design, app interfaces, tech branding, wayfinding, signage, futuristic, tech, clean, geometric, systematic, geometric utility, digital ui, modern branding, system clarity, rounded corners, square-oval bowls, low contrast, open counters, crisp terminals.
A geometric sans built from squared-off, superellipse-like curves and straight runs, producing bowls that read as rounded rectangles rather than circles. Strokes are low-contrast and consistently weighted, with smooth corner radii and crisp, mostly horizontal/vertical terminals that keep the silhouette orderly. The capitals feel broad and stable, while the lowercase maintains a compact, engineered rhythm; counters are generally open and the spacing appears even, supporting a calm, controlled texture in lines of text. Figures follow the same squared-round logic, with the 0 rendered as a rounded rectangle and other numerals emphasizing flat-sided curves and clean joins.
Well-suited to interface typography, dashboards, and product UI where a contemporary, engineered look is desired. It also fits tech branding, packaging for electronics, and wayfinding/signage systems that benefit from broad, stable letterforms and a consistent, grid-friendly rhythm.
The overall tone is modern and technical, with a slightly sci‑fi, interface-driven feel. Its squared curves and regulated proportions communicate precision and efficiency rather than warmth or calligraphic personality.
The design appears intended to translate the logic of rounded-rectangle geometry into a practical sans for modern digital contexts, balancing distinctive squared curves with straightforward construction for clear, contemporary display and interface use.
Distinctive superellipse construction shows strongly in C/G/O/Q and in rounded joins on letters like a, b, d, p, and q. Diagonals (A, K, V, W, X, Y) are sharp and straightforward, adding a crisp contrast to the softened corners elsewhere, and the lowercase a is single-storey with a streamlined, horizontal finishing stroke.