Sans Superellipse Porus 7 is a very bold, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Dimensions' by Dharma Type, 'Aeroxys' by Kulokale, 'Exorts Compressed' by Seventh Imperium, and 'Gokan' by Valentino Vergan (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, titles, condensed, retro, industrial, assertive, graphic, impact, space saving, poster display, modernist styling, geometric clarity, monolinear, rectilinear, rounded corners, compact, vertical emphasis.
A tightly condensed display sans with tall proportions and a strong vertical rhythm. Strokes read largely monolinear, with subtle contrast created by narrow interior counters and occasional tapered joins. Curves are built from rounded-rectangle geometry, producing superelliptic bowls and terminals with softened corners rather than circular rounds. Counters are small and often slit-like, and many letters use simplified, stacked forms that keep widths compact while preserving clear silhouettes.
This font is well suited to headlines, titles, and short bursts of text where a compact, high-impact voice is needed. It works particularly well for posters, branding marks, packaging, and editorial display settings that benefit from a tall, condensed texture and strong graphic presence.
The overall tone is bold and commanding, with a streamlined, poster-era sensibility. Its rigid verticality and rounded-rectangular construction give it an industrial, architectural feel that reads confident and slightly theatrical. The result is a strong display voice suited to attention-grabbing, graphic typography.
The design appears intended as a space-saving display sans that maximizes impact through height, compression, and rounded-rectangular construction. Its consistent vertical emphasis and simplified counters suggest a focus on strong word shapes and high contrast against the page in bold, modern layouts.
The typeface maintains a consistent narrow rhythm across upper- and lowercase, with ascenders and descenders that help add variation in texture without widening the set. Numerals follow the same condensed, rounded-rectilinear logic, keeping a unified color in dense settings. Because counters are tight, the design reads best when given enough size or spacing to avoid filling-in visually.