Sans Superellipse Olgir 6 is a bold, very narrow, monoline, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, signage, labels, condensed, industrial, utilitarian, assertive, modern, space saving, high impact, modern utility, compact display, compact, tall, closed apertures, rounded corners, high contrast counters.
This typeface is extremely condensed with tall proportions and tight internal space, creating a compact, vertical rhythm. Strokes are essentially uniform, with squared terminals softened by subtly rounded corners, giving the forms a sturdy, engineered feel rather than a geometric purity. Curves tend toward squarish bowls and rounded-rectangle counters, and many letters show relatively closed apertures and narrow openings that emphasize density. Uppercase and lowercase share a consistent, straight-sided construction; the lowercase reads with a modest x-height against relatively prominent ascenders and descenders, and the numerals follow the same narrow, upright structure.
This font is best suited to short, high-impact settings where space is limited: headlines, posters, packaging, labels, and compact signage. It can also work for UI callouts or narrow columns when a strong, condensed sans voice is desired, but it will generally perform better at medium to large sizes than in long passages.
The overall tone is efficient and no-nonsense, with a strong, compressed voice that feels industrial and contemporary. Its dense shapes and tight apertures add an assertive, slightly severe character that reads as practical and space-conscious.
The design appears intended to maximize content density while maintaining a sturdy, uniform-stroke presence. Its rounded-rectangle construction suggests a goal of combining an engineered, modern silhouette with slightly softened edges for improved visual flow in tight widths.
In running text the condensed width noticeably increases line density, and the tight counters can become visually dark at smaller sizes. The rounded-corner finishing helps prevent the forms from feeling brittle despite the extreme compression.