Sans Superellipse Tebom 1 is a very bold, narrow, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Akkordeon' by Emtype Foundry, 'CF Blast Gothic' by Fonts.GR, 'Burger Honren' by IRF Lab Studio, 'Cairoli Now' by Italiantype, 'Neue Helvetica' by Linotype, 'DoCQoi Sans' by Thirdin, and 'TT Bluescreens' by TypeType (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, signage, logos, retro, punchy, rugged, playful, industrial, display impact, vintage print, stamp texture, signage voice, brand character, condensed, blocky, rounded, soft corners, irregular edges.
A condensed, heavy sans with rounded-rectangle construction and a distinctly worn outline. Strokes are thick and mostly monolinear, with softly blunted terminals and subtly uneven contours that read like ink spread, stamping, or rough-cut printing. Counters are compact and simplified, and rounded letters (O, Q, 0) take on a squarish, superellipse feel, while verticals stay dominant and tightly spaced for a dense, poster-ready rhythm.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as posters, headlines, packaging fronts, signage, and logo wordmarks where its dense silhouette and textured edges can carry the design. It works especially well when you want a vintage print or stamped aesthetic without adding separate distress effects.
The texture and compact forms give it a gritty, analog personality—part vintage signage, part rubber-stamp utility. It feels bold and assertive but not clinical, with a casual, slightly mischievous tone that suits attention-grabbing headlines and characterful branding.
The design appears intended to combine a condensed, superellipse-inspired structure with a deliberate distressed finish, creating a bold display face that evokes analog reproduction and vintage commercial lettering while staying simple and sans-driven.
In the text sample the dense spacing and heavy color create strong impact at display sizes, while the rough edges become a defining feature rather than a subtle detail. The numerals share the same blocky, softened geometry, reinforcing a cohesive, uniform voice across letters and figures.