Sans Superellipse Rylas 4 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui design, signage, branding, headlines, product labels, modern, technical, geometric, industrial, friendly, geometric system, approachable tech, clarity, contemporary branding, functional text, rounded terminals, squared curves, boxy rounds, tall ascenders, open apertures.
A geometric sans with superelliptical construction: many curves resolve into rounded-rectangle forms rather than pure circles, giving bowls and arches a squared-off softness. Strokes are largely uniform with clean joins and rounded terminals, producing a smooth, engineered rhythm. Proportions feel slightly condensed in some letters with tall ascenders and relatively compact bowls, while counters stay open and legible. The uppercase has simple, monoline structure; the lowercase uses a single-storey a and g, a compact e with a tight eye, and an i/j with square-ish dots that match the overall rectilinear rounding. Numerals follow the same rounded-rect geometry, with sturdy, straightforward shapes and clear differentiation.
Well-suited to interface typography, dashboards, and other digital products where clean geometry and open counters aid readability. Its distinctive superelliptical curves also work well for contemporary branding, packaging, and headlines, and the sturdy forms make it a practical option for signage and environmental graphics.
The tone is contemporary and utilitarian, with a friendly edge created by the softened corners. Its squared-round geometry reads as tech-oriented and systematic, suggesting interfaces, wayfinding, and product branding rather than humanist or calligraphic expression.
The design appears intended to merge geometric clarity with softened corners, creating a modern sans that feels technical but approachable. The consistent rounded-rect logic across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals suggests a system-driven approach aimed at stable, repeatable typography for contemporary applications.
Distinctive letterforms include a boxy, squared-bowl feel in O/C/G and similarly rounded-rect arches in m/n/u, which creates a consistent visual system across cases. The overall texture is even and calm, holding up well at text sizes while still showing a recognizable geometric personality in headlines.