Sans Superellipse Dyla 2 is a regular weight, wide, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: branding, headlines, ui labels, packaging, signage, modern, clean, futuristic, friendly, technical, clarity, modernity, distinctiveness, readability, geometric, rounded, squared, crisp, polished.
The design is built from softened, squarish curves—rounded rectangles and superellipse-like bowls—paired with straight, vertical stems. Strokes show noticeable contrast, giving counters and joins a crisp, carved look rather than a monoline feel. Terminals are generally rounded or gently tapered, and many curves flatten subtly at the sides, producing an orderly, engineered silhouette. Overall spacing reads open and calm, with a consistent geometric logic across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.
Well-suited for branding, product identity, and UI/UX where a modern, rounded sans with extra character can stand out without becoming decorative. It performs nicely in headlines, short paragraphs, packaging, and editorial callouts, and its numerals look appropriate for data-forward layouts, signage, and interface labeling. The crisp contrast and geometric construction make it especially effective at medium to large sizes.
This font projects a clean, composed modernism with a slightly futuristic edge. Its rounded geometry and disciplined rhythm feel friendly and accessible, while the crisp contrast adds a more technical, designed-for-display confidence.
The letterforms appear intended to blend approachable rounded geometry with sharper typographic contrast, creating a distinctive sans that feels both friendly and designed. The consistent superelliptical construction suggests an emphasis on systematized shapes suited to contemporary identity work while maintaining clear character differentiation in text.
Several forms lean into flattened sides and squared-off bowls, creating a recognizable rhythm in words and strong silhouettes in single letters. The punctuation and numerals share the same rounded-rectangular logic, helping mixed text (letters plus numbers) feel cohesive.