Sans Superellipse Elfy 7 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: branding, sportswear, technology, ui labels, posters, sporty, technical, modern, dynamic, clean, convey motion, signal precision, modernize tone, improve clarity, oblique, rounded, streamlined, squared-round, taut.
An oblique sans with squared-round, superelliptical construction and smoothly chamfered corners. Strokes are clean and fairly uniform, with moderate contrast created mainly by angled joins and curved-to-straight transitions rather than overt calligraphic modulation. Bowls and counters tend toward rounded-rectangle shapes, giving letters a slightly condensed, aerodynamic feel while maintaining clear openings. The slant is consistent across caps, lowercase, and numerals, and the overall rhythm reads tight and controlled with crisp terminals and minimal ornament.
Well suited to branding systems that need a modern, kinetic voice—sports, automotive, tech, and product identities. It can work effectively in headlines, signage, and UI labels where an oblique, performance-driven tone helps direct attention. In longer passages it remains legible, but it will read most distinctive when given space at display sizes.
The overall tone is fast and engineered—more performance-oriented than conversational. Its rounded-technical shapes and steady slant suggest motion, precision, and a contemporary industrial sensibility, leaning toward sporty branding rather than classic editorial warmth.
The design appears intended to combine the efficiency of a sans with a streamlined, motion-forward italic stance. Superelliptical rounds and squared shoulders aim for a contemporary, engineered feel that stays clean and reproducible across letters and numerals.
Uppercase forms stay compact and sturdy, while lowercase maintains a straightforward, utilitarian texture with minimal quirks. Numerals match the same squared-round logic, helping mixed alphanumeric strings look cohesive. The design’s clarity comes from consistent curvature and disciplined spacing rather than distinctive decorative features.