Slab Contrasted Hove 6 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Acumin' by Adobe, 'Mreyboll' by Twinletter, 'Palo Slab' by TypeUnion, and 'Herd' by Wahyu and Sani Co. (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, sports branding, packaging, headlines, logos, athletic, retro, industrial, assertive, headline, impact, ruggedness, speed, brand punch, display clarity, slabbed, chunky, ink-trap-like, compact, angled terminals.
A heavy, right-slanted slab-serif design with compact proportions and strongly bracketed, blocky serifs. Strokes are broadly even with only subtle modulation, creating dense, dark letterforms that read as sturdy and mechanical. Corners show sharp notches and small cut-ins at joins and terminals (an ink-trap-like detail) that add bite and improve separation at display sizes. The lowercase is robust and tightly built, with a single-storey a and g and short, thick joins that keep the texture consistent across words. Numerals follow the same squat, weighty logic, with wide counters and emphatic slabs.
Best suited for display typography such as posters, sports or team branding, bold packaging labels, and punchy editorial headlines. It works especially well where a condensed, forceful rhythm is needed—taglines, event promos, and logo lockups—rather than long-form text.
The overall tone is bold, competitive, and energetic, with a strong retro-sports and workwear flavor. Its slanted posture and chunky slabs push it toward action-oriented messaging, while the tight, engineered shapes convey toughness and reliability.
This font appears designed to deliver maximum impact with a rugged slab-serif voice, combining a forward-leaning stance with compact, high-ink letterforms. The notched detailing suggests an intent to keep heavy shapes from clogging while adding a distinctive, industrial edge.
The strong weight and angled details create pronounced word shapes, especially in mixed-case settings, but the dense color can reduce clarity at smaller sizes. The distinctive cut-ins and notched terminals become a key stylistic signature in headlines and short phrases.