Slab Square Abnaw 3 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: body text, editorial, book design, packaging, signage, typewriter, vintage, scholarly, workmanlike, print evocation, utility, readability, nostalgia, slab serif, bracketed serifs, sturdy, angular, ink-trap feel.
A sturdy slab-serif design with compact proportions and a distinctly angular, carved-in feel. Serifs are bold and mostly squared, often with subtle bracketing that softens joins while keeping a firm, blocky silhouette. Strokes are relatively even, with mild modulation and occasional pinched or notched transitions that suggest ink-trap-like details at tight corners. Curves are slightly squarish rather than fully round, and the overall rhythm is steady and readable, with a utilitarian texture in text.
It performs well in editorial and book typography where a classic, workmanlike slab-serif texture is desired, and it can also support packaging or labels that benefit from a vintage, printed look. The sturdy serifs and clear shapes make it suitable for headings and short signage, especially when you want a traditional, utilitarian tone without delicate contrast.
The font conveys a practical, archival tone—part typewriter-adjacent, part old printing-house. Its sturdy slabs and slightly roughened geometry give it a dependable, no-nonsense voice with a vintage/editorial flavor rather than a refined, high-fashion feel.
The design appears intended to evoke practical print and typewriter-era slab serif conventions while maintaining solid readability. Its squared terminals and firm serifs prioritize durability and a consistent text color, aiming for a dependable, slightly nostalgic voice for contemporary use.
Uppercase forms read strong and poster-capable, while lowercase shows a more idiosyncratic, mechanical texture that becomes noticeable in paragraphs. Numerals share the same squared, robust construction, supporting consistent color across mixed text and figures.