Sans Superellipse Elfe 2 is a light, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui text, headlines, branding, sports graphics, signage, technical, sleek, futuristic, sporty, efficient, modernity, streamlining, geometric cohesion, interface clarity, motion, rounded corners, squared curves, oblique stress, compact apertures, aerodynamic.
A slanted sans with a superelliptical construction: bowls and counters are built from rounded-rectangle forms, giving curves a squarish, engineered feel. Strokes are smooth and fairly even, with crisp terminals and consistently softened corners rather than sharp points. The rhythm is narrow-to-moderate and taut, with slightly compact apertures and a streamlined, forward-leaning stance; diagonals in letters like K, N, V, W, X are clean and decisive. Numerals share the same rounded-corner geometry, producing a cohesive alphanumeric texture that stays tidy in lines of text.
Well-suited for user interfaces, dashboards, and product labeling where a crisp, contemporary voice is needed. It also works effectively for short headlines, posters, and sports/tech branding that benefit from a fast, engineered look. In longer passages it maintains a consistent texture, though the tight apertures and pronounced slant suggest best results at moderate sizes with comfortable spacing.
The overall tone is modern and purposeful, with a subtle “speed” impression from the italic angle and squared-rounded curves. It reads as tech-forward and utilitarian rather than friendly, suggesting instrumentation, performance, and contemporary interface design.
The font appears designed to merge geometric clarity with a softened, superelliptical aesthetic, creating a clean italic sans that feels streamlined and modern. Its consistent rounded-corner logic and controlled stroke behavior suggest an emphasis on cohesion across letters and numerals for contemporary display and interface contexts.
The design relies on consistent corner radii and rounded-rectangular counters, which makes it especially recognizable in letters with enclosed shapes (B, D, O, P, Q) and in the more geometric numerals. The slant is strong enough to signal motion while keeping letterforms controlled and not overly calligraphic.