Sans Superellipse Sinij 5 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, signage, ui labels, branding, techy, industrial, retro-futurist, utilitarian, mechanical, compactness, systematic geometry, technical voice, display impact, squared-round, condensed, monolinear, modular, geometric.
A condensed geometric sans built from squared-round (superellipse-like) outlines and mostly uniform strokes. Curves resolve into softened corners rather than true circles, giving letters a rounded-rectangle skeleton across bowls and counters. Terminals are generally flat and crisp, with occasional small notches and squared joins that add a subtly modular, engineered feel. The lowercase follows a single‑storey approach in several forms, and the numerals echo the same boxy rhythm with compact apertures and straight-sided curves.
Best suited to display roles where a compact footprint and a distinctive technical voice are helpful—headlines, posters, signage, packaging callouts, and interface labels. It can also work for short paragraphs when you want a dense, structured texture, though the narrow forms and tight counters may call for comfortable sizing and spacing.
The overall tone reads technical and utilitarian, with a slightly retro-futurist flavor reminiscent of signage, instrumentation, and early digital interfaces. Its tight proportions and squared geometry communicate efficiency and control more than warmth or calligraphy.
The design appears intended to merge geometric clarity with a softened rectangular motif, creating a contemporary sans that feels engineered rather than neutral. By repeating rounded-rectangle curves and flat terminals throughout, it aims for consistent, system-like letterforms that read quickly and stay visually distinctive.
The condensed set and rectangular counters create a strong vertical rhythm and a prominent texture in paragraphs. Corners are consistently rounded, but the construction stays rigid and grid-like, which helps maintain a cohesive “machined” look across caps, lowercase, and figures.