Sans Superellipse Edkoh 7 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, italic, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Dharma Gothic' and 'Dharma Gothic Rounded' by Dharma Type (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, packaging, editorial display, sporty, modern, dynamic, efficient, technical, space saving, sense of speed, modern branding, display impact, condensed, slanted, rounded corners, monoline, high-waisted.
A tightly condensed, right-slanted sans with monoline strokes and rounded-rectangle shaping in bowls and counters. Curves read as softened superellipses rather than true circles, giving letters like O/C/G a squared-off smoothness. Terminals are mostly clean and blunt, with occasional subtle rounding, and the overall rhythm is upright in construction but energized by the consistent slant. Proportions are compact with tall lowercase bodies and short extenders, keeping lines dense while preserving clear internal counters.
Best suited to display settings where a condensed, energetic voice is useful: headlines, posters, sports and active-lifestyle branding, packaging callouts, and editorial feature titles. It can work for short UI labels or signage when space is limited, but its narrow proportions favor larger sizes and shorter text runs.
The font conveys speed and efficiency, with a streamlined, aerodynamic feel typical of contemporary display and branding typography. Its narrow stance and forward slant suggest motion and urgency, while the softened corners keep it approachable instead of harshly industrial.
The design appears intended to deliver a modern condensed italic with a fast, branded personality, combining squared-off rounded geometry with clean sans construction for strong vertical economy and a consistent, contemporary texture.
Uppercase forms appear engineered and compact, with simplified geometry and restrained joins; diagonals (V, W, X, Y) are sharp but not brittle due to the rounded treatment. Numerals follow the same condensed, slightly squared curvature, reading cleanly at larger sizes where the tight width becomes a distinctive voice.