Sans Superellipse Elho 4 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: branding, sports graphics, tech ui, automotive, headlines, sporty, techy, sleek, dynamic, futuristic, speed emphasis, modernization, geometric unity, tech signaling, brand distinctiveness, rounded corners, soft terminals, oblique slant, geometric, compact curves.
This typeface is an oblique sans with a geometric, superelliptical construction: curves tend to resolve into rounded-rectangle bowls and counters rather than true circles. Strokes are clean and fairly uniform, with smooth joins and softly clipped terminals that keep the forms crisp without feeling sharp. Capitals are slightly squared in their rounds (notably in C, D, O, Q), while the lowercase follows the same softened geometry, producing compact, controlled apertures and a steady rhythm. Figures share the same rounded-rect silhouette, with a streamlined, engineered look and consistent spacing that reads tidy in lines of text.
It suits contemporary branding, sports and performance-themed graphics, and technology or automotive-facing identities where motion and precision are desirable. It also works well for short to medium headlines, UI accents, and product labeling where a streamlined, modern sans can carry a distinctive geometric voice without becoming decorative.
The overall tone is modern and kinetic, with a forward-leaning posture that suggests speed and efficiency. Its softened corners keep it approachable, while the disciplined geometry and squared curves introduce a technical, product-like character.
The design appears intended to fuse aerodynamic italic energy with a controlled, rounded-rect geometry, creating a distinctive sans that feels both fast and engineered. It prioritizes a cohesive shape system across cases and figures to deliver a modern, recognizable texture in display and branding contexts.
The design leans on smooth, continuous curvature and rounded corners across both letters and numerals, creating a cohesive “soft-tech” texture. The oblique angle is integrated into the construction rather than feeling mechanically slanted, helping the alphabet maintain consistent proportions and balance in longer passages.