Solid Teby 7 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Habana Deco ML' by HiH (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, packaging, event promo, playful, retro, graphic, chunky, kinetic, attention grab, decorative display, graphic branding, geometric, stencil-like, angular, rounded, notched.
This font uses heavy, solid letterforms built from bold geometric masses with frequent notches, wedges, and cut-ins that interrupt otherwise round counters and straight stems. Shapes mix circular components (especially in C, G, O, Q, and the bowl-heavy lowercase) with sharp triangular terminals and step-like joins, creating a deliberately irregular rhythm across the alphabet. Counters are largely collapsed into solid forms, so recognition relies on silhouette and strategically placed bites rather than open internal spaces. Overall proportions feel compact and blocky with short-looking extenders and a tight, poster-style color.
Best suited to large-size display settings where the bold silhouettes can carry meaning without relying on counters—posters, headlines, logo marks, packaging, and promotional graphics. It will also work well for short, high-impact phrases where its irregular rhythm becomes a feature rather than a distraction.
The tone is lively and attention-seeking, with a mid-century/arcade-like graphic energy driven by bold silhouettes and playful angular intrusions. Its quirky construction reads as intentionally unconventional and decorative, lending a fun, slightly eccentric character rather than a restrained or formal one.
The design appears intended to create maximum visual impact through solid, simplified forms and distinctive notched silhouettes, trading traditional readability cues for graphic personality. Its consistent use of wedges and block geometry suggests a deliberate system aimed at producing a memorable, emblematic look across letters and figures.
Round letters often feature a distinctive “pac-man” bite or wedge cut, while diagonals in V/W/X/Z lean on triangular geometry for a strong zig-zag cadence. Numerals are similarly chunky and simplified, with the 8 and 9 rendered as solid, emblem-like shapes rather than traditional open forms.