Slab Square Pemy 5 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, signage, packaging, headlines, interfaces, techy, industrial, retro, mechanical, clean, systematic, utilitarian, high clarity, retro tech, branding, squared, modular, rounded corners, boxy, sturdy.
A square-shouldered slab design with monoline strokes and a wide footprint. Forms are built from straight segments and softly rounded corners, producing rounded-rectangle counters in letters like O, D, and P. Serifs are flat and blocky, with generally uniform stroke endings and occasional functional notches or cut-ins that reinforce the engineered, modular construction. The rhythm is steady and open, with broad spacing and clear, high-contrast silhouettes despite the even stroke weight.
Best suited to display settings where its broad, squared forms can speak clearly: headlines, signage, wayfinding, product labeling, and UI or dashboard-style graphics. It can also work for short paragraphs when a technical, engineered voice is desired, especially at comfortable sizes where the slab details stay crisp.
The overall tone feels technical and industrial, like labeling on equipment or interface typography from a retro-futurist context. Its squared geometry reads confident and utilitarian, while the rounded corners keep it approachable rather than harsh.
The design appears intended to merge slab sturdiness with a squared, modular geometry, creating a dependable, system-like texture that remains readable while projecting a machine-made character.
Uppercase shapes emphasize rectilinear structure (notably E, F, T), while curved letters maintain a squarish profile. Numerals share the same rounded-rectangle logic, giving sets like 0 and 8 a cohesive, digital-panel flavor. The lowercase keeps a straightforward, constructed feel with a compact, workmanlike texture in text.