Slab Rounded Fyva 7 is a regular weight, very narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, posters, headlines, editorial, branding, typewriter, vintage, quirky, friendly, handmade, space-saving, retro voice, warmth, legibility, display impact, bracketed serifs, ball terminals, soft corners, condensed, tall ascenders.
This face is a condensed, monoline slab-serif with softly rounded corners and small, bulb-like terminals. Strokes are consistently weighted, with gentle bracketing where stems meet serifs, giving the letterforms a slightly cushioned, stamped look rather than a rigid geometric feel. Proportions are tall and narrow, with long ascenders and descenders and compact counters that keep the texture tight in text. The lowercase shows single-storey forms (notably a and g), a short crossbar on t, and narrow, upright bowls; figures follow the same slim, upright construction with simple, readable shapes.
Its narrow, tall proportions make it effective for space-conscious headlines, poster titling, and packaging where a strong vertical rhythm helps copy fit without losing presence. The softened slab details suit nostalgic branding, café or product labels, and editorial pull quotes where a typewriter-flavored voice is desired.
The overall tone reads as typewriter-adjacent and retro, with a playful softness that feels approachable rather than severe. The rounded terminals and slightly uneven, hand-touched rhythm add charm and informality, suggesting printed ephemera, labels, and nostalgic editorial styling.
The design appears intended to blend the authority and structure of a slab-serif with the warmth of rounded terminals, creating a compact display/text face that feels vintage, personable, and highly legible at moderate sizes.
In running text, the condensed width produces a dense vertical rhythm, while the rounded serifs help prevent the texture from becoming overly sharp. Capital forms remain narrow and stately, and punctuation retains the same dot-like, rounded detailing seen in terminals and i/j dots.