Slab Contrasted Ohge 6 is a bold, wide, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, signage, headlines, packaging, logotypes, western, circus, retro, rugged, playful, attention grabbing, vintage display, sign painting, decorative texture, brand character, bracketed, chunky, ink-trap, notched, rounded.
A heavy, display-oriented slab serif with chunky, bracketed slabs and deep interior cut-ins that create a notched, almost ink-trap-like texture. Stems are robust and mostly vertical, while bowls and curves are generously rounded, giving the forms a soft, inflated feel despite the mass. The design shows clear stroke modulation and frequent interior counters that pinch or step inward, producing a lively, carved rhythm across words. Uppercase proportions feel sturdy and compact, with prominent slabs on letters like E, F, T, and I; lowercase is similarly weighty with single-storey a and g, and short, stout terminals.
Best suited to headlines and short passages where its distinctive slabs and notched interiors can be appreciated—posters, event graphics, storefront or wayfinding-style signage, and expressive packaging. It can also work for logo wordmarks that want a vintage, bold presence, while extended body text is likely to feel dense without careful spacing.
The overall tone evokes vintage signage and show-poster lettering—confident, slightly rambunctious, and attention-seeking. The stepped cut-ins and oversized slabs add a theatrical, frontier-meets-carnival flavor that reads as nostalgic and handmade rather than corporate or minimal.
The design appears intended to reinterpret classic slab-serif display forms with added interior cut-ins and sculpted joins to increase personality and visual rhythm. It aims for strong impact and period-evocative character, prioritizing bold silhouette and decorative texture over quiet neutrality.
In text settings, the strong internal notches and tight counters can visually darken lines, especially at smaller sizes; it benefits from generous tracking and ample line spacing. Numerals are bold and characterful, matching the letterforms with rounded shapes and emphatic slab details.