Sans Superellipse Rukiz 9 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Film P3' by Fontsphere and 'PTL Adigo' by Primetype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, packaging, editorial display, art deco, condensed, retro, elegant, minimal, space saving, display impact, deco revival, geometric clarity, branding, monoline, rounded ends, tall, clean, geometric.
A tall, tightly condensed sans with monoline strokes and softly squared, superellipse-like curves. The forms are built from narrow verticals and rounded-rectangle bowls, producing a consistent, architectural rhythm. Terminals are smooth and slightly rounded, with minimal modulation and clean joins that keep counters compact. Uppercase and lowercase share a coherent, streamlined construction, with simplified shapes and restrained detailing that favor clarity over ornament.
This design works best for display typography where a condensed footprint and distinctive geometric flavor are desirable—posters, magazine headlines, packaging, and brand marks. It can also be effective for short subheads or captions when generous spacing and comfortable sizes are used to preserve legibility.
The overall tone feels Art Deco–leaning and metropolitan, with a sleek, vintage-modern confidence. Its compressed geometry and rounded-rectangular curves create a poised, stylish voice that reads as both retro and contemporary. The texture is calm and controlled, giving headlines a polished, boutique sensibility.
The design appears intended to deliver a compact, high-impact display voice rooted in rounded-rectangular geometry, pairing a vintage Deco-like silhouette with modern simplification. Its consistent stroke weight and controlled curves suggest a focus on clean reproduction and a recognizable, space-saving wordmark texture.
Because of the tight proportions and narrow apertures, the font creates a strong vertical color and packs words efficiently, emphasizing word shapes as slender silhouettes. Numerals match the same condensed, rounded-rectilinear logic, supporting consistent typographic color in mixed alphanumeric settings.