Sans Superellipse Sidin 6 is a bold, narrow, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, magazine, branding, packaging, editorial, dramatic, authoritative, luxury, retro, space saving, impact, refinement, modernity, condensed, vertical stress, crisp, sculpted, ink-trap-ish.
A condensed display face with strongly modulated strokes and an upright, vertical rhythm. Thick stems pair with very thin hairlines and sharp, clean terminals, creating a crisp, high-contrast texture. Curves are compact and somewhat squared-off in places, giving round letters a taut, superelliptical feel rather than fully circular bowls. Counters are relatively tight and the overall silhouette reads tall and sculpted, with a mixture of straight-sided forms and controlled, minimal curvature that keeps word shapes compact.
Best suited to headlines, cover lines, and short blocks of copy where contrast and condensed width provide impact without consuming space. It will work well for magazine/editorial layouts, fashion or luxury branding, packaging, and event or poster typography where a dramatic voice is desirable. For body copy, it will be more comfortable at larger sizes due to the fine hairlines and tight internal spaces.
The tone is commanding and theatrical, with a fashion/editorial polish that feels premium and deliberate. Its tight width and stark stroke contrast add a sense of urgency and impact, while the refined detailing keeps it from feeling crude or purely industrial. Overall it conveys confidence, formality, and a slightly retro-modern headline attitude.
The design intent appears to be a space-efficient display sans with elevated contrast—combining compact, modern geometry with refined stroke modulation for high-impact typography. It aims to deliver a premium, editorial look that remains clean and structured while still feeling expressive in large settings.
In text samples the dense vertical rhythm creates strong emphasis and a dark, punchy color on the line. The hairlines can become delicate at smaller sizes, so spacing and size choice will strongly affect clarity. Numerals and capitals share the same tall, condensed stance, supporting consistent, poster-like hierarchy.