Sans Superellipse Raram 8 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Hyugos' by Fateh.Lab, 'Lady Fame Sans' by Redy Studio, and 'Monopol' by Suitcase Type Foundry (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, editorial, packaging, signage, condensed, modern, utilitarian, industrial, space saving, display impact, modern clarity, systematic geometry, monoline, rounded corners, tall proportions, compact, clean.
A tall, tightly condensed sans with mostly monoline strokes and softly rounded corners throughout. Curves are built from rounded-rectangle geometry, giving bowls and counters a superelliptical feel rather than purely circular forms. Terminals are clean and blunt, joins are straightforward, and spacing is compact, producing a dense, vertical rhythm that stays consistent from caps to figures.
Best suited to headlines, subheads, posters, and other space-constrained layouts where a lot of text must fit without losing impact. It also works well for branding accents, packaging panels, labels, and signage systems that benefit from a compact, high-density sans with consistent, modern shapes.
The overall tone feels modern and no-nonsense, with an industrial directness and a slightly retro, poster-like flavor typical of compressed display sans styles. Its narrow build and squared-round shapes create a confident, engineered voice that reads as functional rather than friendly.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum economy of width while maintaining clear, contemporary letterforms. Its rounded-rectilinear construction suggests a goal of blending geometric cleanliness with softer corners for a controlled, manufactured look that stays legible in display settings.
The numerals and punctuation follow the same condensed, rounded-rectangle construction, helping headings and mixed-content lines feel cohesive. The type’s strong vertical emphasis makes word shapes tall and columnar, which can look striking in large sizes but visually tight in long runs of text.