Sans Superellipse Raday 6 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, signage, packaging, art deco, retro-futurist, architectural, clean, cool, space-saving, stylized modernity, display clarity, systematic, monoline, rounded corners, tall proportions, streamlined, geometric.
A condensed sans with monoline strokes and softened corners throughout, the design leans on rounded-rectangle geometry rather than circular bowls. Verticality dominates: stems are straight and tall, curves are tight and controlled, and terminals often finish with small radiused ends. Counters are compact, giving the face a streamlined, efficient texture; distinctive forms like the open, looped ampersand and the pointed join in the W add character without breaking overall consistency.
Best suited to display typography such as posters, packaging, headlines, and branding where a tall, condensed voice is desirable. It can work well for signage-inspired design, editorial titles, and UI moments that need a narrow footprint with strong personality, though the compact counters and short lowercase may call for larger sizes and generous tracking in longer passages.
This font conveys a crisp, composed tone with a distinctly engineered, retro-futurist flavor. Its tall, condensed stance and rounded-rectangular curves create a cool, slightly playful severity that feels both modern and evocative of early 20th‑century signage and Art Deco lettering.
The letterforms appear designed to maximize a sleek, space-efficient silhouette while maintaining a recognizable, stylized identity. The consistent stroke weight and rounded-rectangular construction suggest an intention toward a cohesive geometric system that stays legible at display sizes and remains visually distinctive in headings.
Lowercase forms read compact with a notably low x-height relative to ascenders, and the overall rhythm is strongly vertical. Numerals follow the same rounded-rectangular logic (notably the narrow 0 and the curved 2/3), supporting a consistent typographic color across mixed alphanumeric settings.