Sans Superellipse Sidoy 10 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, wordmarks, editorial display, condensed, poster-ready, art-deco, retro, assertive, space-saving impact, display emphasis, retro-modern tone, graphic clarity, brand presence, monolinear, vertical, architectural, clean, crisp.
This is a tightly condensed sans with tall proportions, compact counters, and a strong vertical rhythm. Strokes read largely monolinear with subtle modulation, and terminals are predominantly straight and blunt, giving the letterforms a crisp, engineered finish. Curves tend to resolve into rounded-rectangle/superellipse shapes—especially in bowls and the “O/0”—producing smooth, controlled rounding rather than fully circular forms. The texture is dense and even, with narrow apertures in letters like C, S, and e, and numerals that match the same tall, compact footprint.
Best suited for attention-grabbing headlines, posters, and packaging where verticality and density help maximize impact in limited horizontal space. It can also work well for wordmarks and mastheads that benefit from a streamlined, architectural silhouette, and for editorial display lines where a retro-modern flavor is desired.
The overall tone feels confident and display-forward, with a modernized Art Deco and industrial poster sensibility. Its narrow, towering forms create urgency and impact, while the controlled rounding keeps the voice refined rather than rough or hand-made.
The design appears intended to deliver a space-saving, high-impact display voice by combining tall condensed proportions with smooth superellipse rounding and blunt terminals. The goal seems to be a controlled, modern-retro look that remains clean and legible while projecting strong graphic presence.
The font’s condensed width and closed-in counters increase visual density, which amplifies presence in large settings but can make small sizes feel darker and more compressed. The proportions of capitals, lowercase, and figures appear stylistically unified, supporting consistent headline typography across mixed-case text and numbers.