Slab Square Udduh 6 is a regular weight, wide, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: editorial design, book typography, magazines, pull quotes, branding, editorial, classic, bookish, formal, confident, text emphasis, editorial voice, classic authority, readable italic, slab serifs, bracketed slabs, calligraphic slant, open apertures, sharp joins.
This is a right-leaning italic slab serif with sturdy, bracketed serifs and a moderately calligraphic stroke flow. Letterforms are relatively broad with ample interior space, and the curves (notably in C, O, Q, and e) read open and smooth rather than tightly compressed. Strokes show clear thick–thin modulation, but the weight stays even enough to keep the texture stable in paragraphs. Terminals often finish in flat, squared slab shapes, while joins and diagonals (K, V, W, X) are crisp and decisive. Figures follow the same italic logic, with round forms staying generous and straighter digits maintaining a firm, structural presence.
It suits editorial and long-form layouts where an italic voice is needed with strong presence—introductions, pull quotes, captions, and emphasized passages. The robust slabs and broad proportions also make it effective for magazine headlines, packaging copy, and brand systems that want a classic but assertive italic.
The overall tone is traditional and editorial, with an energetic italic cadence that feels confident rather than delicate. The slab serifs add a grounded, authoritative character, giving the face a scholarly, print-minded impression even at larger display sizes.
The design appears intended to blend classic serif italic structure with the firmness of slab serifs, producing an italic that remains readable and anchored in text while still offering expressive movement for display moments.
In continuous text the rhythm is lively: the italic angle and pronounced entry/exit strokes create forward motion, while the broad proportions and open counters help keep word shapes clear. Uppercase forms feel stately and slightly formal, pairing well with the more fluid lowercase for typographic hierarchy.