Sans Superellipse Rarin 1 is a regular weight, very narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Metria Street' by VP Creative Shop (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, signage, branding, packaging, condensed, retro, streamlined, architectural, utilitarian, space-saving, technical clarity, retro modernism, systematic geometry, rounded corners, stencil-like joins, vertical stress, clean, high contrast spacing.
A tall, tightly set sans with uniform stroke weight and strongly condensed proportions. Curves are built from rounded-rectangle shapes, giving bowls and counters a squared-off, superelliptical feel with softened corners. Vertical stems dominate, terminals are mostly flat and clean, and several joins resolve into narrow bridges that read slightly stencil-like at small sizes. The overall rhythm is crisp and linear, with compact counters and a consistent, engineered geometry across capitals, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited to display roles where a condensed footprint is valuable: headlines, posters, editorial titling, and branding systems that need a tall, space-saving voice. It can also work well for wayfinding, labels, and packaging where a clean, technical tone and tight horizontal economy are priorities.
The font conveys a sleek, modernist attitude with a distinct retro-industrial edge. Its narrow stance and rounded-rectangular curves feel efficient and technical, suggesting signage, machinery labels, and streamlined display typography rather than casual text.
The design appears intended to fuse condensed industrial sans proportions with superelliptical, rounded-rectangle geometry for a distinctive, space-efficient display style. The controlled monoline strokes and squared curves aim for consistent texture and a recognizable, engineered silhouette across letters and numbers.
Round letters like O/Q and forms such as a/e show squared bowls with gentle rounding, reinforcing a modular, constructed look. The narrow apertures and condensed counters create a dense texture, while the monoline strokes keep the color even across lines. Numerals echo the same tall, squared-curve construction, supporting consistent typographic tone in mixed alphanumeric settings.