Sans Superellipse Felaz 3 is a very bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Coast' by Groupe Dejour and 'Alumni' by TypeSETit (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, sportswear, packaging, sporty, urgent, industrial, dynamic, loud, compact impact, motion emphasis, modern utility, branding punch, condensed, slanted, rounded, blocky, compact.
A compact, forward-slanted sans with tightly packed proportions and rounded-rectangle (superellipse) construction. Strokes are heavy and decisive with subtly modulated thickness, producing strong color and a punchy texture in words. Curves stay squared-off at the corners, while terminals read clean and blunt, keeping counters small but legible. The overall rhythm is steady and engineered, with narrow letters that hold together well in dense settings.
Best suited for high-impact headlines, display typography, and branding where space is tight but presence needs to be strong. It works well for sports and streetwear aesthetics, product packaging, labels, and promotional graphics. In longer passages it will read most comfortably at larger sizes or with generous line spacing due to its dense color.
The tone is assertive and energetic, leaning toward athletic and utilitarian signaling. Its slant and mass create a sense of motion and urgency, while the softened corners keep it from feeling harsh or overly technical. The result feels modern, tough, and performance-oriented rather than delicate or literary.
The design appears intended to deliver a fast, powerful voice in a compact footprint, combining an athletic italic stance with softened, superelliptical shaping. It prioritizes impact and cohesion across caps, lowercase, and figures for confident display use in modern commercial contexts.
Numbers and capitals maintain the same compact, rounded-rect geometry, giving a cohesive, uniform voice across alphanumerics. In longer lines, the strong weight and tight widths create a dense, poster-like presence that favors impact over airy readability.