Slab Contrasted Beva 10 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, sports branding, signage, vintage, sporty, assertive, playful, retro, impact, nostalgia, motion, branding, texture, chunky, bracketed, rounded, ink-trap feel, high-contrast.
A heavy, right-leaning slab serif with broad proportions and tightly packed, compact counters. Strokes show a clear contrast, with thick verticals and noticeably thinner joins and diagonals, while the serifs read as substantial slabs that often feel softly bracketed rather than razor-sharp. Terminals and curves are rounded and slightly bulbous in places, and several glyphs show small notch-like cut-ins that create an ink-trap-like texture at joins and inside corners. Overall spacing looks robust and display-oriented, with sturdy silhouettes and a consistent, rhythmic slant.
Best suited to display typography such as headlines, posters, short slogans, and branding where strong presence and a retro-slanted tone are desirable. It can work well on packaging and signage, especially when set large enough for the internal notches and serif structure to read clearly.
The font projects a bold, retro confidence with a hint of mid-century advertising and athletic signage. Its chunky slabs and energetic slant create a punchy, attention-grabbing voice that feels both nostalgic and lively, leaning more playful than formal.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact with a condensed-to-compact interior rhythm, using bold slabs and a consistent italic angle to convey motion and confidence. The subtle cut-ins and rounded shaping suggest an aim for both legibility at display sizes and a distinctive, memorable texture.
The lowercase includes several distinctive, high-energy forms (notably the looped descenders and the single-story shapes), and the numerals are wide and weighty, matching the strong, poster-like color of the text. The combination of heavy slabs, rounded shaping, and small internal cut-ins adds texture that becomes part of the character at larger sizes.