Sans Superellipse Ehney 11 is a light, narrow, low contrast, italic, tall x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, app branding, tech editorial, product signage, dashboards, technical, futuristic, sleek, efficient, sporty, space saving, modernization, speed cue, system design, clarity, rounded, monoline, condensed, oblique, streamlined.
A condensed, oblique sans with monoline strokes and softly squared curves that read as rounded-rectangle geometry. Corners are consistently radiused and terminals are clean and open, producing a smooth, engineered rhythm rather than calligraphic modulation. Counters stay generous for the width, with compact apertures and tight, orderly spacing that keeps lines looking fast and controlled. Numerals follow the same rounded, slightly squarish construction, with simple, high-clarity shapes.
Works well for UI labels, navigation, and compact headings where a tight footprint is useful and the oblique stance can suggest motion. It also suits technology and product branding, transportation or athletic graphics, and editorial sidebars where a sleek, engineered texture is desired. In longer passages it reads best at moderate sizes with comfortable leading to keep the slanted forms from feeling crowded.
The overall tone feels modern and aerodynamic—more industrial and interface-like than friendly. Its rounded geometry keeps it approachable, while the slant and condensed proportions add urgency and motion associated with tech, transportation, and sport. The voice is neutral and functional, suited to contemporary systems where speed and clarity matter.
The design appears intended to deliver a contemporary, space-efficient sans that blends engineered rounding with an energetic slant. Its consistent radiused geometry and restrained detailing point to an emphasis on systematized shapes that stay distinctive in headlines and practical in interface contexts.
Round forms (O, 0, Q) lean toward a superelliptical silhouette, avoiding perfect circles and reinforcing a consistent “soft-rectangle” theme across caps, lowercase, and figures. Crossbars and joints stay restrained, helping maintain a clean texture in longer text while preserving a distinctive, forward-leaning stance.