Slab Contrasted Mime 9 is a regular weight, narrow, very high contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, packaging, signage, art deco, display, theatrical, graphic, retro, deco revival, ornamental display, graphic impact, signage style, stencil-like, geometric, boxy, high-contrast, vertical stress.
A sharply geometric display face built from compact rectangular stems and prominent slab terminals, with dramatic internal cut-ins that create a stencil-like, two-tone effect. Counters are often oval or teardrop shaped and sit inside tall, narrow silhouettes, giving the letters a strong vertical rhythm. Strokes alternate between heavy outer blocks and thin connecting elements, producing a crisp, poster-like contrast and a slightly modular feel across the alphabet.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as posters, headlines, event promotions, logotypes, and packaging where its cutout contrast can read as a graphic motif. It performs especially well at medium to large sizes, where the interior detailing and distinctive counters remain clear and intentional.
The overall tone is boldly decorative and reminiscent of Art Deco-era signage, with a theatrical, engineered character. Its cutaway detailing and severe geometry feel assertive and stylized, lending a cinematic, nightlife, or cabaret flavor when set in words.
The font appears designed to translate Art Deco-inspired slab forms into a modern, highly graphic system, using cutouts to add motion and ornament without relying on curves or flourishes. Its letterforms prioritize a memorable silhouette and rhythmic texture for display typography over neutral text reading.
The design relies on negative-space shaping as much as the black strokes, so spacing and line breaks become part of the visual pattern. Round letters and diagonals are deliberately constrained by the rectangular framework, emphasizing a constructed, architectural look.