Slab Unbracketed Anjy 7 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, italic, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, sports branding, magazine covers, condensed, assertive, retro, industrial, editorial, space saving, high impact, headline emphasis, sturdy legibility, retro utility, slab serif, unbracketed, oblique stress, tight rhythm, compact spacing.
A condensed italic slab serif with crisp, unbracketed terminals and a firm, engineered silhouette. Strokes stay largely even, with small contrast and a consistent forward slant that gives the letterforms a quick, directional rhythm. The serifs read as squared blocks that meet stems cleanly, while counters are compact and apertures are kept tight, reinforcing a dense texture in text. Proportions emphasize height and narrowness, with compact sidebearings and a steady baseline presence across both uppercase and lowercase.
This face is well suited to headlines and subheads where space is limited and a strong, condensed voice is needed. It can work effectively on posters, packaging, and branding systems that benefit from an energetic italic emphasis and a sturdy slab foundation. In editorial design it performs best for display sizes, pull quotes, and short bursts of text where its dense rhythm becomes a feature rather than a constraint.
The overall tone is bold and utilitarian, with a vintage editorial flavor. Its slanted, tightly packed shapes feel urgent and energetic, suggesting motion and emphasis without becoming decorative or script-like. The slab details add a confident, workmanlike character that can read as both classic and industrial.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact in narrow measure while staying robust and legible, using squared slab terminals and an italic slant to communicate speed and emphasis. It aims for a practical, attention-getting texture that feels at home in signage, headlines, and tightly set promotional typography.
Uppercase forms show strong verticality and squared-off finishing, while the lowercase maintains the same condensed pace, producing an even “striped” texture in paragraphs. Numerals follow the same narrow, italic logic and appear designed to hold their own in running text, with clear, compact shapes suited to tight layouts.