Solid Poba 7 is a very bold, narrow, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Chamelton' by Alex Khoroshok, 'Mr Dum Dum' by Hipopotam Studio, 'Nd Harquied' by Notdef Type, and 'Galpon Pro' by RodrigoTypo (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, packaging, stickers, playful, chunky, retro, quirky, toy-like, max impact, playful branding, graphic texture, simplification, blobby, rounded, notched, compressed, cartoonish.
A compact, heavy display face built from dense, rounded silhouettes with frequent angular nicks and chamfer-like corners. Counters are largely collapsed into solid forms, with only occasional small cut-ins to suggest internal structure (notably in curved letters and figures). The rhythm is irregular and characterful: some glyphs lean more geometric (O/0-like ovals), while others show abrupt bite-marks and stepped edges that create a hand-cut, stencil-adjacent feel without consistent bridges. Spacing appears tight in text, and the high x-height keeps lowercase forms visually close to caps, reinforcing a blocky, packed texture.
Best suited for short display settings where bold silhouette and personality matter: posters, big headlines, playful branding, packaging, and sticker/merch graphics. It can also work for punchy subheads, but extended text may feel visually dense due to the filled counters and tight, heavy texture.
The overall tone is loud, friendly, and slightly mischievous—like cut-paper lettering or chunky rubber-stamp forms. Its solid, counterless construction reads as intentionally graphic and attention-seeking, giving it a retro novelty flavor with a DIY edge.
The design appears intended to maximize black shape and visual punch while keeping forms approachable through rounded geometry. By collapsing counters and adding small cut-ins, it creates recognizable letter identities in a deliberately simplified, graphic style aimed at novelty display applications.
Curved characters often include small interior notches rather than open bowls, which maintains a uniform mass across the line. The numerals follow the same blob-and-notch logic, with simplified shapes that prioritize impact over detail.