Sans Superellipse Tilah 3 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, stickers, social ads, handmade, playful, grungy, casual, quirky, handmade feel, textured impact, friendly punch, diy character, brushy, textured, condensed, rounded, uneven.
A condensed, heavy sans with rounded-rectangle construction and visibly irregular stroke edges that mimic a marker or dry-brush texture. Strokes are mostly monolinear with slight thickness fluctuations, and terminals tend to be blunt and softly rounded rather than sharp. Counters are compact and sometimes slightly pinched, while curves (C, O, S) read as squarish rounds that keep a consistent, superelliptical silhouette. Spacing is somewhat uneven in feel, contributing to a lively rhythm in words rather than a strictly mechanical cadence.
Best suited to short, high-impact text such as posters, headlines, labels, packaging callouts, and social graphics where the textured edges can be appreciated. It can also work for playful branding accents or merch-style typography, especially when a handmade, imperfect look is desired. For long passages or small UI text, its condensed proportions and roughened outlines may limit readability.
The overall tone is informal and handmade, with a playful roughness that feels zine-like and indie. Its condensed heft gives it urgency and impact, while the soft, rounded geometry keeps it friendly rather than aggressive. The texture adds a human, imperfect character that suggests craft, DIY, and casual humor.
Likely designed to capture the look of quick, hand-rendered lettering while keeping a consistent, condensed skeleton for strong vertical presence. The superelliptical round forms and blunt terminals suggest an intent to balance friendliness with punch, delivering a distinctive texture that feels crafted rather than digitally pristine.
Uppercase forms appear tall and poster-like, and the lowercase maintains a straightforward, print-derived structure without calligraphic joins. Numerals follow the same condensed, brushy logic, with simple shapes and blunt terminals that prioritize visual consistency over precision. At larger sizes the edge texture becomes a defining feature; at smaller sizes it may read as noise and slightly reduce clarity.