Slab Square Hyme 7 is a very bold, narrow, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Rummy Tall' by Bunny Dojo, 'Berber' by Letterbox, and 'Winner Sans' by sportsfonts (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, sportswear, signage, logos, industrial, athletic, western, authoritative, rugged, impact, compactness, heritage, octagonal, blocky, angular, condensed, bracketless.
A condensed, heavy display face built from straight strokes and sharp, chamfered corners. Stems and arms end in flat, slab-like terminals with little to no bracketing, creating a squared-off, poster-ready silhouette. Curves are minimized and often faceted into octagonal forms, especially in rounded characters, while counters stay compact and geometric. The rhythm is tight and punchy, with short extenders and a sturdy baseline presence that keeps the texture dense in words and headlines.
Best suited for bold headlines, poster titling, and branding that needs a strong, condensed voice. It works especially well for sports graphics, team apparel, packaging labels, and sign-like layouts where high-impact letterforms are favored. For longer text, it’s more effective as a display accent than as a primary reading face.
The overall tone feels tough and utilitarian, with a clear association to signage, uniforms, and bold headline typography. Its angular construction adds a mechanical, no-nonsense attitude, while the slabbed endings lend a vintage, frontier-meets-industrial flavor. The result reads as confident, loud, and built for impact rather than subtlety.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual weight in a compact width, with a consistent square-and-slab construction that stays legible at distance. Its faceted rounds and flat terminals suggest a deliberate nod to varsity/western display traditions while keeping a crisp, industrial edge for modern headline use.
Uppercase forms appear more rigid and monumental, while the lowercase keeps the same squared geometry and compact counters, maintaining consistency across mixed-case settings. Numerals and round letters use clipped corners to preserve the blocky theme, helping the design stay cohesive in alphanumeric-heavy applications.