Sans Superellipse Sodij 11 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, signage, retro, techy, confident, industrial, playful, display impact, geometric unity, brand voice, signage clarity, rounded, squared, geometric, modular, condensed caps.
A heavy, geometric sans with a rounded-rectangle (superellipse) construction and consistently softened corners. Strokes are sturdy and fairly uniform, with clean terminals and a compact, vertically oriented rhythm in the capitals. Curves are squarish rather than circular, giving bowls and counters a rectangular feel, while joins stay crisp and controlled. Lowercase forms keep the same modular logic with simple, sturdy structures; figures follow the same rounded-square geometry for a cohesive texture in mixed text.
Best suited for headlines and short-to-medium display text where its modular, rounded-square geometry can be a visual feature. It works well for branding, packaging, signage, and editorial titling that aims for a retro-tech or industrial voice. For dense body copy, it’s likely more effective in larger sizes where the distinctive counters and compact caps can breathe.
The overall tone feels retro-futurist and industrial, combining friendliness from the rounded corners with a firm, engineered presence. It reads as confident and slightly playful, with a tech-and-signage flavor that stands out without becoming ornamental.
The font appears designed to translate a superelliptic, rounded-rectangle geometry into a bold, highly consistent alphabet with strong silhouettes. Its intention is to deliver a modernized retro display look—clean, constructed, and approachable—while keeping letterforms simple enough to stay legible in prominent applications.
The design’s squared curves create distinctive silhouettes in letters with bowls and diagonals, producing a strong headline color and clear, repeated shapes across the set. The font maintains a consistent visual system across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals, emphasizing a constructed, display-forward character.