Sans Superellipse Lapo 11 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, ui display, posters, branding, futuristic, techy, clean, sleek, space-age, futurism, system feel, modern branding, interface tone, geometric clarity, rounded, modular, geometric, streamlined, soft-cornered.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle (superellipse) skeletons with consistently soft corners and uniform stroke weight. Counters are wide and open, with horizontal strokes that often extend farther than expected, giving the alphabet a stretched, panoramic footprint. Joins and terminals are smooth and controlled, while select letters introduce angled cuts and sharp diagonals (notably in K, M, N, V, W, X, Y, Z) that add snap against the otherwise pill-shaped curves. The overall rhythm is spacious and stable, with a low-contrast, engineered feel and clear separation between strokes in forms like E, F, and S.
Best suited to display sizes where its rounded-rect geometry and extended proportions can read clearly—headlines, tech branding, product identities, posters, and interface titles. It can work for short UI labels or dashboards where a sleek, modern tone is desired, but the wide spacing and strong horizontality make it most effective for concise phrases rather than dense paragraphs.
The design reads as futuristic and interface-oriented—calm, precise, and slightly sci‑fi. Its rounded geometry softens the tone, keeping it friendly rather than aggressive, while the extended proportions and angular diagonals maintain a crisp, high-tech edge.
This font appears designed to deliver a modern, futuristic sans with a cohesive superelliptical construction—balancing soft corners for approachability with crisp diagonals for clarity and momentum. The goal seems to be a distinctive, system-like voice that feels engineered and contemporary, especially for technology-leaning visual identities.
In text, the wide letterforms create prominent word shapes and a strong horizontal flow, making the type feel expansive. Round letters (O, Q, C) lean heavily into superelliptical bowls, while the more constructed diagonals and open apertures keep the texture from becoming overly uniform. Numerals follow the same rounded-rect logic, reinforcing a cohesive system feel for alphanumeric settings.