Sans Superellipse Etlor 7 is a bold, narrow, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Belle Sans' by Park Street Studio, 'Amsi Pro' and 'Amsi Pro AKS' by Stawix, 'Mynor' by The Northern Block, and 'Robusta' by Tilde (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, advertising, packaging, sporty, urgent, assertive, contemporary, dynamic, space saving, high impact, speed emphasis, modern utility, branding strength, condensed, slanted, blocky, rounded corners, compact.
A condensed, right-slanted sans with heavy, uniform strokes and compact proportions. Curves are built from rounded, squarish bowls rather than true circles, giving O/C/G/Q a superellipse feel and keeping counters tight but open enough for display sizes. Terminals are mostly blunt with softened corners, and joins are sturdy, producing a solid, poster-like texture. The overall rhythm is vertical and compressed, with a forward lean and consistent stroke width that maintains clarity across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited to large-scale typography where impact and momentum matter: headlines, posters, sports branding, and promotional graphics. It can also work for short bursts of copy such as labels, packaging callouts, and interface banners, where a compact footprint and strong presence are desirable.
The font projects speed and pressure—confident, energetic, and slightly aggressive in tone. Its compressed width and italic stance evoke athletics, headlines, and promotional messaging, while the rounded-rectangle geometry adds a modern, engineered character rather than a humanist warmth.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum emphasis in minimal horizontal space, pairing a forward-leaning stance with robust, simplified letterforms. The superelliptical rounding and blunt terminals suggest an aim for modern, industrial clarity without sacrificing visual intensity.
Uppercase forms are compact and emphatic, while lowercase maintains a utilitarian, single-storey construction where applicable, keeping shapes simple and punchy. Numerals follow the same condensed, heavy approach for a unified typographic color, and the slant remains consistent across the character set shown.