Sans Superellipse Tigul 7 is a very bold, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Dharma Gothic', 'Dharma Gothic P', and 'Dharma Gothic Rounded' by Dharma Type and 'Tungsten' by Hoefler & Co. (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, signage, logos, industrial, retro, rugged, assertive, utilitarian, space saving, high impact, print texture, signage feel, condensed, blocky, rounded corners, inked texture, stamped.
A condensed, heavy sans with tall proportions and rounded-rectangle construction throughout. Strokes stay broadly uniform, with softened corners and squared-off curves that give counters a superelliptical feel. The shapes are compact and upright, with tight internal spaces and short apertures; curves tend to flatten into vertical sides, creating a sturdy, poster-like rhythm. Many glyphs show slightly irregular edges and uneven fill, suggesting a stamped or distressed rendering rather than a perfectly clean digital outline.
Best suited for display roles where compact width and high impact are valuable—headlines, poster titles, packaging labels, and bold signage. It can also work for logo wordmarks that need a condensed, industrial voice, but the tight counters and textured edges make it less appropriate for long-form reading at small sizes.
The tone is forceful and workmanlike, with a retro industrial flavor. Its dense weight and compressed stance feel authoritative and urgent, while the subtly worn texture adds a tactile, analog attitude reminiscent of stencils, rubber stamps, or letterpress signage.
Likely designed to deliver maximum presence in minimal horizontal space, combining rounded-rectangle geometry with an intentionally imperfect, inked finish. The overall construction prioritizes punchy legibility and a tactile, print-inspired character for attention-grabbing display typography.
Uppercase forms read especially strong and uniform, while the lowercase maintains the same compressed, blocky logic for consistent texture in mixed-case settings. Numerals match the letterforms with the same rounded-rect geometry and stout presence, producing a cohesive, high-impact line of text.