Slab Monoline Jime 6 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, posters, headlines, book covers, branding, typewriter, rustic, quirky, vintage, hand-inked, vintage print, humanized texture, sturdy readability, display character, bracketed, sturdy, ink-trap, textured, soft corners.
A sturdy slab-serif with mostly monoline strokes and softened, rounded terminals. Serifs are heavy and often bracketed, ending in small bulb-like tips that read as inked or stamped details rather than sharp cuts. The outlines show deliberate irregularity and slight wobble, giving a lightly distressed, printed-from-a-worn-form feel while maintaining clear letter shapes and steady rhythm in text. Counters are generous and open, and the overall proportions lean roomy with a broad stance and comfortable spacing.
Well-suited to packaging, signage, posters, and branding that wants a vintage or handcrafted print vibe. It can carry short to medium text in settings where texture and personality are desirable, and it works especially well for display copy, titles, and labels where its chunky slabs and inky details can be appreciated.
The font conveys a vintage, typewriter-adjacent personality with a friendly roughness. Its inky imperfections and chunky slabs suggest analog printing—posters, labels, and ephemera—adding warmth and character without becoming overly decorative or hard to read.
Likely designed to evoke traditional printed typography—typewriter and letterpress cues—while staying sturdy and legible. The goal appears to be a dependable slab-serif voice with intentional, humanized irregularities for character and warmth.
Uppercase forms feel stout and confident, while lowercase maintains a straightforward, workmanlike construction with small idiosyncrasies that keep lines of text lively. Numerals share the same robust slab treatment, reinforcing a cohesive, utilitarian tone across letters and figures.