Sans Superellipse Ehnuh 2 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: editorial, branding, posters, ui labels, packaging, modern, crisp, efficient, technical, space saving, modernization, motion, clarity, neutrality, condensed, oblique, monoline, clean, rounded corners.
A condensed, oblique sans with a monoline skeleton and softly squared curves that read as rounded-rectangle forms in bowls and counters. Strokes stay even and clean, with a slight humanist feel in the curved joins and open apertures, while overall construction remains streamlined and upright in its geometry despite the slant. Terminals are mostly plain and clipped rather than flared, keeping the rhythm crisp and linear. Numerals follow the same narrow, tidy proportions, with simple, legible shapes that align well with the uppercase’s compact stance.
Works well for editorial typography, headlines, and subheads where a compact footprint and clear slanted emphasis help fit more content into limited space. It also suits branding, packaging, and poster work that benefits from a modern condensed voice and a sense of motion. In interface contexts, it can be effective for short labels, navigation, and small blocks where a narrow, consistent texture is desirable.
The tone is contemporary and purposeful, combining a speedy, forward-leaning posture with a restrained, utilitarian finish. It feels sporty and efficient, suited to designs that want momentum without looking aggressive or overly stylized.
Likely intended as a space-saving, contemporary oblique sans that delivers speed and clarity through condensed proportions and rounded-rectangle letterforms. The design balances geometric regularity with gentle curvature to stay clean and modern while remaining approachable in text and display settings.
The condensed width and consistent stroke color create tight, economical word shapes, while rounded counters prevent the texture from feeling brittle. The italic angle is noticeable and uniform, contributing to a cohesive, directional flow across longer lines.