Slab Contrasted Fali 6 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, signage, branding, packaging, western, circus, poster, heritage, playful, display impact, vintage revival, wood type, decorative texture, headline clarity, bracketed, chunky, ink-trap, notched, rounded.
A heavy slab-serif with broad proportions and compact counters, drawn with chunky, bracketed serifs and frequent triangular notches at joins. Strokes are robust with subtle contrast, and curves are full and round, giving letters a dense, blocky silhouette. Terminals and serifs often show cut-in details that read like ink traps or carved facets, adding texture and helping open counters at display sizes. The lowercase is sturdy and simple with single-storey forms (notably a and g), while numerals are similarly weighty and poster-like.
Best suited to bold headlines, posters, signage, and branding where its slab structure and carved details can be appreciated. It also fits packaging and event or entertainment graphics that want a vintage or western showcard feel. For longer passages, it works more as a short, attention-grabbing text accent than as continuous body copy.
The overall tone feels theatrical and vintage, evoking wood type, western ephemera, and bold headline printing. Its carved details and blunt massing convey confidence and spectacle, with a friendly, slightly whimsical edge rather than a strict industrial seriousness.
The design appears intended as a high-impact display slab that references historic wood-type and show-printing traditions, using notched joins and sturdy slabs to create a memorable, decorative texture while retaining clear letterforms.
In text settings the distinctive notches create a strong internal rhythm that becomes part of the pattern of the word shapes; this character is most pronounced in capitals and in letters with strong vertical joins. Spacing appears generous enough for display lines, but the dense weight and tight apertures suggest it benefits from ample size and leading to keep counters from visually filling in.