Sans Superellipse Jehi 2 is a very bold, narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'ITC Machine' by ITC and 'Queency' by Vampstudio (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, packaging, signage, bold, punchy, retro, playful, posterish, impact, display, retro flavor, friendly boldness, compactness, blocky, rounded corners, condensed feel, softened geometry, high impact.
This typeface uses heavy, compact strokes with softened rectangular curves and rounded terminals, producing a squarish, superelliptical silhouette across both uppercase and lowercase. Curves read as rounded-rectangle arcs rather than circular bowls, and joins stay sturdy and closed, giving counters a tight, economical feel. The rhythm is dense and vertical, with slightly irregular width behavior between letters that adds a subtly hand-cut, display-like texture. Numerals follow the same compact, blocky construction, keeping a consistent, unified color in lines of text.
Best suited to large sizes where its compact geometry and heavy presence can carry titles, posters, and branding. It can work well for packaging, labels, and signage where a bold, friendly impact is needed, and for logotype work that benefits from a chunky, rounded-rect silhouette.
The overall tone is assertive and attention-grabbing, with a vintage headline energy reminiscent of signage and poster lettering. Its rounded geometry keeps the mass from feeling harsh, lending a friendly, slightly quirky character despite the strong weight.
The design appears intended as a high-impact display sans that merges condensed, blocky proportions with rounded-rectangle curves. Its consistent heaviness and softened corners suggest a focus on bold readability and a distinctive, slightly retro texture rather than neutral body-text performance.
In sample text, the tight counters and compact shapes create a solid typographic “wall,” which reads best when given generous tracking and line spacing. Short, blocky forms like E, F, T, and the numerals appear especially sturdy, while letters with diagonals (K, V, W, X) retain the same blunt, softened-geometry flavor.