Sans Superellipse Elvi 11 is a regular weight, narrow, very high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, editorial display, mod, playful, retro, whimsical, graphic, display impact, retro modernism, brand distinctiveness, graphic contrast, playful tone, monoline hairlines, bulbous rounds, soft corners, high-waist apertures, staccato rhythm.
This typeface pairs extremely thin vertical hairlines with bold, rounded terminals and counters, creating a striking thick–thin rhythm. Many forms are built from soft superellipse-like bowls and rounded rectangles, contrasted against straight, needle-like stems (notably in letters such as h, l, r, and several numerals). Curves tend to be smooth and inflated, while joins and cross strokes are simplified and geometric, producing a crisp, poster-ready silhouette. Proportions are compact with relatively small lowercase bodies and prominent ascender/descender actions, and widths vary noticeably between glyphs, giving text a lively, uneven cadence.
Best suited to display typography where its extreme contrast and rounded geometry can be appreciated—titles, posters, branding marks, packaging, and editorial pull quotes. It also works well for short, playful messaging where the animated rhythm is a feature, while long text or small sizes may require generous sizing and spacing to preserve the hairline details.
The overall tone feels mod and playful, with a retro-futurist personality reminiscent of mid-century display lettering. The dramatic contrast and bouncy shapes read as quirky and expressive rather than neutral, adding charm and theatricality to headlines and short phrases.
The design appears intended to fuse geometric, superellipse-based construction with a high-impact thick–thin system, creating a distinctive display voice. Its simplified structure and emphatic round counters suggest a focus on memorable shapes and a stylized, modern-retro identity rather than quiet utility.
Round letters like O and Q appear as clean superelliptical rings, while punctuation and dots read as strong, circular accents. The sample text shows clear word shapes at larger sizes, with the hairline strokes becoming a defining stylistic feature that adds sparkle but also increases delicacy in dense settings.