Slab Contrasted Vuri 15 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, signage, packaging, logotypes, western, retro, playful, hearty, poster-like, attention, nostalgia, sign feel, bold branding, display impact, bracketed, chunky, rounded, high-ink, soft-edged.
A heavy slab-serif with broad proportions and tightly packed, high-ink letterforms. Serifs are thick and strongly bracketed, giving corners a softened, carved look rather than sharp mechanical joins. Strokes show noticeable, controlled contrast, with rounded transitions that create a slightly swelled, sculpted rhythm across straight stems and curved bowls. Counters are relatively compact for the weight, and curves (C, G, O, S) lean toward stout, almost cylindrical forms; terminals and joins read as deliberately chunky and stable. Numerals match the caps in mass and presence, with similarly blocky silhouettes and sturdy slab detailing.
Best suited to display applications where impact is key: posters, headlines, storefront-style signage, and packaging. It also works well for short branding phrases or logotypes that benefit from a vintage, slab-driven presence, especially at medium-to-large sizes where the bracketed serifs and sculpted contrast read clearly.
The font conveys a bold, old-time display personality—confident and attention-grabbing with a friendly, nostalgic flavor. Its chunky slabs and rounded bracketing suggest classic poster and sign-painting traditions, producing a warm, slightly theatrical tone rather than a strict editorial voice.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, characterful slab-serif look with a nostalgic, sign-inspired feel, balancing strong rectangular slabs with softened bracketing to keep the weight approachable and lively in display settings.
The design’s visual rhythm comes from repeating slab blocks and rounded brackets, which keeps large settings cohesive and punchy. In dense lines the weight and compact counters can darken texture, reinforcing its role as a headline or emphasis face rather than a quiet text workhorse.