Pixel Dash Veba 9 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, album covers, event graphics, techno, digital, industrial, retro, texture-first, tech aesthetic, experimental display, signal motif, striped, modular, geometric, stencil-like, segmented.
A display face built from tightly spaced vertical bars that define letterforms through interruption and negative space. Strokes read as a repeated stripe texture rather than continuous outlines, creating a semi-stenciled construction across straight and curved forms. Curves are squared-off and quantized, with rounded counters suggested by stepped bar terminations, while diagonals appear as offset segments. Spacing and widths vary noticeably by glyph, reinforcing a modular, pattern-driven rhythm in words and lines of text.
Best suited for short, prominent settings where the striped texture can be appreciated—posters, headlines, logotypes, packaging accents, and editorial display. It also works well in tech-themed graphics and motion or UI moments where a scanline or barcode metaphor supports the concept, while longer text should be set with generous size and spacing to maintain clarity.
The striped construction evokes scanning, signal interference, and barcode-like graphics, giving the type a distinctly digital and engineered tone. Its texture-forward look feels retro-futurist and experimental, suited to designs that want an electronic or mechanical edge rather than quiet neutrality.
The design appears intended to merge legibility with a strong surface pattern, turning each glyph into a striped module that reads like scanlines or printed bars. It prioritizes a distinctive graphic signature and a consistent vertical rhythm across the alphabet to create immediate impact in display use.
Because the interior bar pattern remains visible at all sizes shown, the face reads as both text and texture; the stripe rhythm becomes a key visual element in paragraphs, not just headings. Openings and counters are formed by small gaps between bars, so the design favors clear silhouettes over fine detail.