Sans Superellipse Boduh 5 is a very light, narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, branding, packaging, minimalist, airy, elegant, modern, technical, modern refinement, geometric clarity, space efficiency, softened precision, monoline, condensed, geometric, rounded, linear.
A monoline sans with a tall, condensed stance and generously rounded terminals that often resolve into soft capsule-like ends. Curves are built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse forms, giving bowls and counters a smooth, controlled geometry rather than fully circular shapes. Strokes stay consistently thin with clean joins, and many letters use simplified constructions (single-storey forms in the lowercase, narrow apertures, and restrained crossbars) that keep the overall texture even and quiet. Figures are similarly slender and linear, matching the type’s vertical emphasis and open spacing.
Best suited to display settings where its fine stroke and condensed proportions can be appreciated—headlines, posters, editorial titling, and brand marks. It can also work for packaging or UI accents when used at sufficiently large sizes and with ample spacing, where the elegant, minimal texture remains clear.
The overall tone is cool, refined, and understated—more architectural than expressive. Its delicate line and rounded geometry suggest a contemporary, design-forward sensibility with a light, airy presence that feels precise and premium rather than casual.
The design appears intended to deliver a contemporary, geometric voice with a refined light touch, combining strict vertical economy with softened superellipse curves. It prioritizes a clean, curated look and a consistent rhythm across letters and numerals for modern branding and titling contexts.
The narrow proportions and thin strokes create a high degree of negative space, which makes the font feel crisp at larger sizes and gives word shapes a distinctive vertical rhythm. Rounded corners and smooth curves soften the otherwise strict geometry, helping it read as modern and approachable despite its technical discipline.