Slab Contrasted Ohna 10 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, logos, signage, western, industrial, retro, bold, playful, display impact, vintage signage, stencil effect, branding, stencil breaks, soft corners, blocky, chunky, notched.
A heavy, block-based slab design with squared proportions and rounded outer corners. Many letters feature deliberate internal cut-ins and horizontal breaks that read like stencil bridges or inlaid stripes, creating strong negative-shape rhythm within the counters. Strokes are broadly uniform, with compact apertures and simplified joins that keep the silhouettes sturdy and high-impact. The overall texture is dense and poster-like, with clear slab terminals and a consistent system of notches that gives the set a mechanical, constructed feel.
Best suited to posters, headlines, event graphics, and packaging where a strong, decorative voice is needed. It also works well for logos, badges, and signage that benefit from a Western/industrial tone and a built-in stencil-like texture. For longer text, it performs most comfortably in short lines or punchy phrases at generous sizes.
The font projects a Western-tinged, industrial display attitude—bold, tough, and slightly playful due to the softened corners and rhythmic cutouts. Its built-in “broken” detailing evokes stamped signage and vintage poster lettering, lending a retro, hands-on character even when set cleanly.
The design appears intended as a high-impact display face that combines slab structure with stencil-like interruptions to create a distinctive, vintage-leaning texture. Its tall lowercase and compact internal spaces suggest an aim for bold readability while maintaining a signature decorative motif.
Letterforms remain highly legible at display sizes, but the internal breaks and tight counters can visually fill in as sizes get smaller or in low-contrast printing. The notched detailing is consistent across capitals, lowercase, and numerals, helping headings and short bursts of text feel cohesive and branded.