Slab Contrasted Urdy 5 is a bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Abelard' by Indian Type Foundry, 'Quercus 10' by Storm Type Foundry, and 'Abril' by TypeTogether (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, editorial, book covers, branding, confident, traditional, collegiate, authoritative, display impact, readability, classic tone, strong voice, bracketed serifs, sturdy, high-ink, crisp, lively rhythm.
A sturdy slab-serif with bracketed, rectangular serifs and a generous, high-ink color. Strokes show clear thick–thin modulation, with strong vertical stems and slightly lighter joins and cross strokes, producing a confident rhythm in text. Counters are relatively open and round, while terminals and serifs keep a squared-off, structured feel; overall spacing reads comfortable and not overly tight, helping the face hold up at larger sizes. The lowercase shows a traditional, bookish construction with a single-storey g and compact, pragmatic forms that reinforce the solid slab character.
Well-suited to headlines, posters, and prominent editorial settings where a solid slab-serif voice is needed. It also fits book covers and branding that benefit from a traditional, confident look, especially when set at display sizes or in short text passages.
The tone is authoritative and classic, with a familiar editorial presence that feels dependable rather than playful. Its weight and slab structure add a collegiate, headline-forward seriousness, while the noticeable contrast keeps it from feeling purely industrial.
The design appears intended to deliver a classic slab-serif voice with strong presence and readability, balancing sturdy serifs and robust stems with enough contrast to stay refined. It aims for a familiar, trustworthy typographic tone that performs well in attention-grabbing layouts.
Numerals are robust and highly legible, matching the same slab logic and strong vertical emphasis seen in the capitals. The overall texture in the sample paragraph is even and bold, with distinctive word shapes that suit emphatic copy and short-to-medium reading settings.