Sans Superellipse Ruduv 11 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, signage, packaging, art deco, modernist, condensed, retro, geometric, space-saving, display impact, streamlined geometry, signage clarity, retro modernism, rounded corners, vertical stress, tall ascenders, closed apertures, crisp terminals.
A condensed, vertically oriented sans with rounded-rectangle geometry and consistently softened corners. Strokes are mostly uniform with subtle contrast, creating a clean, poster-ready texture without feeling monoline. Counters tend toward tall ovals and superelliptical shapes, and many joins resolve into smooth curves rather than sharp angles. The lowercase is compact and efficient, with tall ascenders and a relatively large x-height that keeps smaller sizes from collapsing, while the numerals follow the same narrow, upright rhythm for a cohesive line of text.
Best suited to headlines, posters, signage, and branding systems that benefit from a condensed footprint and a strong, stylized silhouette. It can also work for short bursts of text—labels, UI headings, pull quotes—where a streamlined, architectural voice is desired more than plain neutrality.
The overall tone feels modernist with an Art Deco lean—sleek, architectural, and slightly theatrical. Its narrow proportions and rounded-rectilinear forms evoke signage, titles, and streamlined product aesthetics rather than neutral, everyday body copy.
The design appears intended to deliver a compact, space-saving sans with a distinctive rounded-rectangular construction, balancing modern clarity with a refined, vintage-leaning display character. It prioritizes consistent vertical rhythm and a recognizable silhouette for titles and identity work.
Spacing and rhythm emphasize verticality, giving words a stacked, columnar feel. Round letters stay tightly controlled and often appear more squarish than circular, which reinforces a structured, engineered personality. The design reads cleanly in all-caps and remains distinctive in mixed case due to the compact lowercase forms and consistently softened terminals.