Sans Superellipse Birom 1 is a very light, normal width, very high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: tech branding, sport branding, posters, headlines, ui display, futuristic, technical, streamlined, aerodynamic, minimal, modernize, signal speed, look technical, create distinctive, display focus, rounded corners, monolinear, condensed, oblique, geometric.
A narrow, forward-leaning sans with monolinear strokes and rounded-rectangle construction throughout. Terminals are consistently softened with squared-off curves, and counters tend to be boxy rather than circular, giving many forms a superelliptical, engineered feel. The rhythm is clean and mechanical, with tall proportions, tight apertures, and a crisp, controlled cadence across the alphabet. Numerals and capitals follow the same rounded-corner logic, with a slashed zero and similarly compact, upright geometry adapted to the oblique angle.
This font is well suited to technology and product branding, esports or motorsport-inspired graphics, and editorial headlines where a sleek, engineered aesthetic is desirable. It can also work for UI display labels or dashboards when set at sizes that preserve its tight apertures and distinctive superelliptical counters. For longer passages, it will be most effective in short bursts—pull quotes, subheads, or feature callouts—rather than dense text blocks.
The overall tone feels sleek and high-tech, suggesting speed, precision, and modern industrial design. Its oblique posture and tightened proportions lend a sense of motion, while the rounded corners keep the voice approachable rather than aggressive. The result reads as contemporary and “designed,” with a distinctly engineered personality.
The design appears intended to translate rounded-rectangle geometry into a fast, modern oblique sans, balancing strict modular construction with softened corners for a refined, contemporary finish. Its distinctive forms prioritize stylistic character and a technical voice, aiming for recognizability in display and branding contexts.
Several glyphs use simplified, modular joins and compact bowls that emphasize uniformity over calligraphic nuance. Diagonals and curves are handled with restraint, reinforcing a technical, display-oriented texture, especially at larger sizes where the rounded-rectangle counters and distinctive numerals are most evident.