Sans Superellipse Dudov 11 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'FF Chambers Sans' by FontFont (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: branding, sportswear, ui labels, product design, posters, techy, sporty, streamlined, modern, friendly, add motion, modernize, soften edges, tech flavor, display clarity, rounded, superelliptical, oblique, sturdy, compact.
A rounded, oblique sans with a superelliptical construction that mixes straight stems with generously curved corners. Curves tend toward squarish rounds (rounded-rectangle bowls and counters), giving letters a compact, engineered feel rather than a purely geometric circle-based look. Strokes are even and sturdy, terminals are mostly blunt with soft radiusing, and joins are clean, producing a consistent, contemporary rhythm in both caps and lowercase. Figures share the same rounded-rect logic, with open, simplified shapes that read clearly at display sizes.
Well-suited to branding and packaging that want a sleek, contemporary voice, as well as sportswear, automotive, or tech-adjacent identity work where a sense of motion helps. It can also work for UI labels, headings, and short informational text where a rounded, engineered aesthetic is desired; it is most convincing at medium to large sizes where the distinctive superelliptical curves are evident.
The overall tone is modern and dynamic, with a forward-leaning posture that suggests motion and speed. Rounded corners keep it approachable, while the squarish curves and firm terminals add a technical, product-oriented attitude.
Likely designed to deliver a fast, modern italic sans that stays clean and structural, pairing friendly rounded corners with a more technical, squared-off curve logic for a distinctive contemporary presence.
The italic angle is noticeable without becoming overly cursive, and the letterforms stay largely upright in construction, emphasizing a mechanical slant rather than handwritten influence. The superellipse-based bowls and rounded corners create a distinctive, slightly “digital” texture across words, especially in repeated curved letters.