Slab Rounded Abmi 7 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'Courier EF' by Elsner+Flake, 'Courier SB' by Scangraphic Digital Type Collection, and 'Fontcraft Courier' by Scriptorium (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: coding, tables, forms, labels, technical docs, typewriter, friendly, utilitarian, retro, approachable, clarity, warm utility, typewriter feel, structured layout, screen-friendly, rounded serifs, soft corners, low contrast, loose spacing, mechanical rhythm.
A monoline, low-contrast slab serif with softened, rounded corners and bracketed slab-like feet that give the strokes a cushioned feel. Proportions are generous and open, with wide letterforms and clear counters; curves are smooth and slightly flattened where they meet stems. The design keeps a consistent mechanical rhythm across caps, lowercase, and figures, with straightforward construction and minimal modulation that reads cleanly at a range of sizes.
This face is well suited to settings that benefit from steady character width and predictable alignment, such as code, terminal-style UI, tables, and structured documents. Its rounded slabs also make it a solid choice for labeling, packaging details, and editorial sidebars where a lightly vintage, practical texture is desired without sacrificing legibility.
The overall tone is typewriter-adjacent and workmanlike, but the rounded detailing makes it feel warmer and less severe than a purely industrial mono. It suggests practicality and clarity with a subtle retro character, lending an approachable, everyday voice rather than a formal one.
The design appears intended to provide a clear, dependable monospaced reading experience with a softened slab-serif voice—balancing utilitarian structure with friendlier, rounded finishing. It aims to evoke familiar typewriter and terminal cues while staying clean and contemporary in texture.
Serifs and terminals appear deliberately softened, reducing sharp joins and giving the face a gentle texture in text. Figures are simple and sturdy, matching the letterforms’ even stroke weight and reinforcing a consistent, orderly cadence across lines.