Sans Superellipse Vegil 1 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, italic, tall x-height font.
Keywords: branding, headlines, posters, ui labels, sports graphics, futuristic, technical, sleek, sporty, retro-tech, speed cue, tech aesthetic, geometric system, modern branding, rounded corners, soft-rectilinear, geometric, extended, oblique.
A clean, oblique sans with monoline strokes and a broad, horizontally extended set. Many curves resolve into rounded-rectangle (superellipse-like) bowls, giving counters a squarish softness rather than pure circularity. Terminals are neatly cut with a consistent slant, and joins stay crisp, producing a controlled, engineered rhythm. Uppercase forms are open and streamlined, while the lowercase shows a tall x-height and compact ascenders, keeping word shapes low-contrast and efficient. Numerals echo the same rounded-rect geometry, with simplified, modular curves and steady stroke continuity.
Well suited to technology branding, product marks, and contemporary packaging where a streamlined, futuristic voice is needed. The extended proportions and oblique stance make it effective for headlines, posters, and sports or automotive-style graphics. It can also work for UI labels and dashboards when a distinctive, modern tone is desired, especially at medium-to-large sizes.
The overall tone feels modern and engineered—sleek, fast, and slightly sci‑fi—without becoming aggressive. Its rounded-square geometry reads as tech-forward and interface-minded, while the steady slant adds motion and a performance-oriented feel.
The letterforms appear designed to unify a geometric, rounded-rectangle construction with an energetic slant, balancing clarity with a distinctive tech aesthetic. The consistent stroke and repeated corner radii suggest an intention toward systematized shapes that feel fast, modern, and easily applied across branding and interface contexts.
The design relies on repeated radiused corners and softened rectangular bowls (notably in O/Q/0 and rounded lowercase like a/e/s), creating a cohesive system across letters and figures. The oblique angle is consistent across the set, and apertures are kept fairly open, supporting clarity in short bursts of text and display use.