Slab Square Pome 7 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: signage, posters, headlines, logos, packaging, industrial, technical, retro, utilitarian, sturdy, impact, clarity, ruggedness, mechanical feel, display strength, square serif, blocky, orthogonal, compact, crisp.
A blocky slab-serif design built from mostly straight, orthogonal strokes with squared curves and flat terminals. The serifs are bold and rectangular, reading almost like bracketless slabs that extend as short “feet” and “caps,” giving letters a rigid, engineered silhouette. Counters tend toward rounded-rectangle shapes, and many joins show squared-off corners rather than smooth transitions. Spacing and widths vary noticeably between glyphs (e.g., narrow I/J vs. wider M/W), producing a rhythm that feels practical and mechanical rather than strictly geometric.
Well-suited for headlines, posters, and signage where a firm, industrial presence is desirable. It can also work for logos, packaging, and UI/label-style applications that benefit from crisp, square-ended detailing and strong slab features, especially at medium to large sizes.
The overall tone is sturdy and utilitarian, with a distinctly industrial, technical feel. Its squared construction and assertive slabs evoke mid-century signage, equipment labeling, and typewriter/line-printer era practicality, giving it a retro-but-functional voice.
The design appears intended to deliver a tough, workmanlike slab-serif voice with squared construction and high clarity. Its consistent stroke weight and rectangular finishing suggest an aim toward practical readability while emphasizing a mechanical, retro-industrial character.
The lowercase is straightforward and legible with single-storey forms (notably a and g) and a simple, squared dot on i/j. Numerals are similarly boxy and open, with an angular, stenciled-in-spirit presence despite continuous strokes. The sample text shows the face holding up well at display sizes, where the slab details and squared curves read most clearly.