Slab Square Tagaw 2 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, sports branding, editorial display, vintage, energetic, editorial, sporty, playful, impact, expressiveness, retro flavor, headline focus, branding, bracketed serifs, ink-trap feel, chiseled, bouncy rhythm, angled stress.
A heavy, right-leaning serif with chunky, slab-like feet and wedgey, slightly bracketed joins. Strokes show a carved, chiseled quality with subtly irregular curvature and angled terminals that create a lively, bouncing rhythm across words. The uppercase is compact and sturdy with pronounced slabs, while the lowercase is more calligraphic in movement, showing distinctive angled entry/exit strokes and tight, punchy counters. Numerals carry the same muscular weight and italic slant, with broad curves and emphatic ends that keep them highly noticeable in text.
Best suited for display applications where texture and momentum are desirable—headlines, posters, cover titling, packaging, and branding that wants a bold, vintage punch. It can work in short blocks of copy when set with comfortable leading, but its strongest performance is in titles, pull quotes, and prominent callouts.
The overall tone feels vintage and high-impact, like classic poster and headline typography with a spirited, slightly mischievous bounce. Its strong slant and chunky finishing strokes give it an energetic, attention-getting voice that reads as confident and a bit theatrical.
The font appears designed to merge stout slab-serif authority with an italic, hand-carved liveliness, aiming for strong presence and memorable word shapes. Its exaggerated terminals and energetic rhythm suggest an intention toward standout display typography rather than understated body text.
Spacing and letterfit appear intentionally dynamic, with shapes that vary in visual width and create a strong texture in paragraph-like settings. The design favors expressive silhouettes over quiet neutrality, and the heavy serifs help anchor lines even as the italic motion pushes forward.