Sans Superellipse Rakiv 6 is a bold, very narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Evening Edition JNL' by Jeff Levine (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, signage, condensed, modernist, utilitarian, assertive, editorial, space saving, modern display, strong presence, systematic forms, tall, compressed, rounded corners, clean, graphic.
A tall, tightly condensed sans with uniform stroke weight and a crisp, high-contrast silhouette created primarily through narrow counters and long vertical stems. Curves are built from rounded-rectangle geometry rather than true circles, giving bowls and terminals a squared-off softness. Joins are clean and mechanical, with minimal modulation and a consistent rhythm across capitals, lowercase, and figures. The overall color is dark and even, with compact apertures and a strong vertical emphasis.
Best suited to display settings where space is limited but impact is needed—headlines, posters, and compact branding applications. It can also work for signage and packaging where a tall, condensed voice helps fit more characters per line while maintaining a strong, consistent typographic color.
The font reads as modern, efficient, and slightly industrial, balancing strict structure with softened corners. Its condensed stance and steady strokes give it an assertive, no-nonsense tone suited to attention-getting typography without feeling decorative.
The design appears intended to deliver a contemporary condensed voice with sturdy, uniform strokes and rounded-rectangular construction for a controlled, system-like look. It aims for high visual efficiency and strong presence, emphasizing verticality and compact width while maintaining clear, repeatable shapes.
In text, the narrow widths produce a dense, headline-like texture; rounded-rectangular bowls keep forms from looking brittle despite the compressed proportions. Numerals follow the same condensed logic, reinforcing a cohesive, display-oriented system.