Slab Contrasted Imha 5 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Rabento' by Mans Greback (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, book covers, editorial design, branding, editorial, vintage, assertive, literary, rugged, emphasis, impact, heritage, display, bracketed, ink-trap feel, ball terminals, sheared.
A robust italic serif with slab-like, bracketed terminals and a pronounced rightward slant. Strokes show clear modulation, with weighty verticals and sturdier horizontals that create a confident, poster-friendly color on the page. Serifs are thick and squared, often softly curved into the stems, and many joins feel slightly pinched, giving an ink-trap-like tightness in places. Counters are compact and the x-height reads tall, while the overall rhythm stays lively through small width changes and dynamic curves across the alphabet and figures.
Best suited to headlines, subheads, and short passages where a bold italic voice is desirable, such as magazine layouts, book covers, and promotional graphics. It can also work for branding systems that want a traditional serif with extra punch, especially in logotypes or callouts where the slant adds emphasis.
The font conveys a classic, print-driven tone—confident and a bit theatrical—evoking old editorial headlines and vintage advertising. Its strong slabs and italic energy add momentum and emphasis, making text feel declarative rather than delicate. Overall it reads traditional but not polite, with a rugged, workmanlike warmth.
The design appears intended to blend the authority of slabby serifs with the forward motion of an italic, prioritizing impact and readability in display settings. It balances traditional letterforms with muscular terminals and lively modulation to create an expressive, print-oriented texture.
Details like ball terminals on several lowercase forms, assertive bracket transitions, and sturdy numerals contribute to a slightly industrial, sign-painter-adjacent flavor. Spacing appears built for display clarity, with dense shapes that hold together well at larger sizes.