Slab Monoline Pepe 11 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: signage, packaging, headlines, ui labels, posters, technical, retro, industrial, utilitarian, mechanical, systematic design, sturdy clarity, retro-tech styling, industrial tone, octagonal, rounded corners, square counters, stenciled feel, modular.
This typeface is built from uniform strokes with squared, slab-like terminals and softly rounded outer corners that create an octagonal, chamfered silhouette. Counters trend rectangular (notably in O, Q, and 0), and curves are handled as straight segments with rounded joins, producing a crisp, engineered rhythm. Proportions are generously set with broad capitals and open spacing, while lowercase forms keep a straightforward, functional construction with compact bowls and short, blocky serifs. Numerals follow the same geometric logic, favoring squared shapes and even stroke presence for a cohesive, system-like texture in text.
It works especially well for signage, product labeling, packaging, and technical or sci‑fi themed graphics where clarity and a structured, engineered voice are desired. The sturdy, squared forms also suit short headlines and interface-style labels, and can add a retro-futuristic edge to poster typography.
The overall tone feels industrial and technical, with a distinctly retro-digital flavor reminiscent of labeling, instrumentation, and early computer/terminal aesthetics. Its disciplined geometry and slabby endings read as practical and machine-made rather than calligraphic or expressive.
The font appears intended to translate slab-serif sturdiness into a modular, geometric system, prioritizing clarity and repeatable shapes. Its chamfered curves and squared counters suggest a design goal of merging industrial legibility with a distinctive, retro-tech personality.
The design leans on chamfered geometry: rounded corners soften the hard-edged construction, keeping it legible and approachable while maintaining a precise, modular look. Distinctive rectangular bowls and the squared-off curves give it a consistent, sign-ready character across caps, lowercase, and figures.