Slab Weird Apsi 2 is a regular weight, narrow, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, logos, playful, eccentric, retro, whimsical, circus-like, novelty display, retro flavor, visual branding, ornamental slab, chunky serifs, ball terminals, ink-trap feel, stencil-like joins, ornamental.
A compact, display-oriented slab serif with heavy, blunt feet and distinctive clover/club-like terminals. Strokes show pronounced contrast: bowls and main stems read as bold masses while several connections pinch down into narrow bridges, creating an ink-trap or cut-in effect. Many letters incorporate small internal notches and separated joins that make the construction feel partly stenciled, while counters stay fairly open for the weight. The overall rhythm is lively and irregular, with a slightly quirky baseline presence caused by the oversized slab bases and recurring terminal shapes.
Best suited to short, prominent text such as headlines, poster titles, event graphics, brand marks, and packaging where its decorative slabs can read clearly. It can also work for playful signage or theme-driven layouts when set with generous size and spacing.
The font projects a theatrical, novelty tone—somewhere between vintage poster lettering and playful oddball signage. Its chunky slabs and unusual terminals give it a humorous, characterful voice that feels more expressive than formal.
The type appears designed to reinterpret slab-serif structure in a deliberately unconventional way, emphasizing memorable terminals and high-contrast joins to create a distinctive, instantly recognizable display voice.
The design’s recurring terminal motif creates strong branding consistency across caps, lowercase, and numerals, but the tight joins and interior cut-ins can visually fill in at smaller sizes. Numerals follow the same ornamental logic, with bold curves interrupted by narrow cross-strokes and distinctive slab bases.