Slab Contrasted Buve 5 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Macahe' by Rômulo Gobira (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, sports branding, retro, sporty, western, loud, playful, display impact, vintage signage, rugged character, motion/energy, headline texture, faceted, angular, ink-trap like, chiseled, blocky.
A heavy, right-leaning slab serif with compact, faceted construction and crisp, angular joins. Strokes terminate in blunt slabs and notched corners, creating a chiseled silhouette that reads as cut or stamped rather than drawn. Counters are relatively tight and shapes are slightly irregular in a deliberate way, with squared-off curves and small triangular bite-ins that add texture. The overall rhythm is assertive and dense, optimized for impact at larger sizes.
Best suited for display typography where punch and personality matter: headlines, posters, event promotions, apparel graphics, and bold packaging titles. It can also work well for short logotypes or wordmarks that benefit from a rugged, faceted slab serif presence.
The font conveys a bold, showy energy with a distinctly retro, sign-painting feel. Its sharp facets and chunky slabs suggest vintage display lettering—part carnival poster, roadside sign, or athletic headline—while the slant adds motion and attitude.
The design appears intended as an attention-grabbing display slab that fuses vintage sign aesthetics with a more aggressive, angular cut. Its notched corners and blocky slabs seem purpose-built to add texture and character while maintaining strong, readable silhouettes in large-scale use.
The all-caps set looks especially emphatic, and the numerals share the same carved, notched detailing for consistent texture. The italic angle and strong serifs create pronounced word shapes, but the tight counters and jagged details can become busy if used too small or with cramped spacing.