Sans Superellipse Isry 5 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, packaging, signage, industrial, athletic, confident, punchy, retro, high impact, display clarity, brand voice, space efficiency, blocky, compact, rounded corners, ink-trap feel.
A heavy, block-constructed sans with a rounded-rectangle (superellipse) skeleton and softened corners throughout. Strokes stay broadly uniform, with subtle internal notch-like detailing that reads like shallow ink traps or cut-ins at joins and terminals, helping keep counters open at large weights. Curves are squarish rather than circular, and many letters finish with flat, blunt terminals that reinforce a sturdy, engineered rhythm. Lowercase forms are robust and compact with a large x-height and short ascenders/descenders, while numerals and caps follow the same squared, rounded-corner geometry for a consistent, poster-ready texture.
Best suited to headlines, short statements, and branding where high impact and compact density are desirable—such as sports identities, bold packaging, event posters, and attention-grabbing signage. It can also work for large-scale UI labels or section headers when a strong, industrial voice is needed.
The overall tone is bold and assertive, with an industrial and athletic energy. Its rounded-square forms give it a retro signage and sports-headline flavor—confident, loud, and built for impact rather than subtlety.
Designed to deliver maximum visual weight with controlled legibility by pairing superelliptical, rounded-rectangle shapes with subtle cut-in details that keep counters from clogging. The intent reads as a modernized, display-oriented block sans built for strong presence in titles and branding.
Spacing appears intentionally tight and dense in text, creating strong color on the page; the design’s small internal cut-ins add character and improve separation in crowded areas. The squared counters and apertures contribute to a compact, muscular look that stays coherent across letters and figures.