Sans Superellipse Ramag 7 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, branding, signage, headlines, packaging, art deco, retro modern, technical, geometric, architectural, deco revival, space-saving, geometric clarity, signage feel, modernist nod, condensed, rounded corners, monoline, squared curves, tall caps.
A condensed, monoline sans with rounded-rectangle construction and softened corners throughout. Curves tend to resolve into squarish bowls and superelliptical counters, giving letters a tall, columnar silhouette with tight horizontal proportions. Strokes are largely uniform, with clean joins and minimal modulation; terminals often finish in rounded ends or flat cuts that keep the texture even. The uppercase set is notably narrow and vertical, while the lowercase echoes the same geometry with simple, legible forms and compact bowls. Numerals follow the same squared-round logic, reading cleanly with a consistent, engineered rhythm.
Well suited to display settings where a tall, condensed voice helps fit copy into tight spaces—posters, editorial headlines, packaging panels, and wayfinding-style signage. It can also work for brand marks and short UI labels when a geometric, retro-technical character is desired.
The overall tone feels streamlined and architectural, with a clear Art Deco and retro-industrial flavor. Its rounded-rect geometry suggests signage, machinery, and mid-century modern styling—orderly, efficient, and slightly futuristic without becoming cold.
The font appears designed to translate rounded-rectangle geometry into a practical condensed sans, balancing a decorative Art Deco impulse with consistent stroke logic and readable letterforms. The aim seems to be a distinctive, structured texture that remains clear in short to medium-length settings.
The design’s distinctiveness comes from the repeated rounded-rectangle motif: bowls, arches, and counters appear squarer than in typical neo-grotesques, producing a crisp pattern at larger sizes. Spacing and proportions create a strong vertical cadence that can look striking in headlines, while the condensed build may require more generous tracking for longer text.