Slab Square Vonuk 6 is a very light, wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, branding, posters, magazine, elegant, architectural, futuristic, editorial, stylish, expressive slab, modernized classic, distinctive texture, graphic voice, editorial tone, angular, monoline, slab serif, calligraphic, spiky serifs.
A very light, right-leaning slab serif with an angular, almost constructed skeleton. Strokes are predominantly monoline, with crisp corners and sharp joins that create a faceted, chiseled feel. Serifs read as thin, slab-like wedges with square-leaning ends, often extended into pointed spur details that give many letters a hooked, knife-edge finish. Proportions are notably wide with open counters and generous sidebearings, and the rhythm is driven by long horizontals and taut diagonals rather than soft curves.
Best suited to display sizes where its fine strokes and distinctive spur serifs can be appreciated—headlines, brand marks, fashion and culture magazines, posters, and titling. It can work for short text bursts or pull quotes, but the sharp detailing and light weight favor spacious settings over dense paragraphs.
The overall tone feels refined yet unconventional—part fashion editorial, part technical drawing. Its sharp spur serifs and lean italic posture add drama and forward motion, suggesting a slightly futuristic or avant-garde character rather than a classical book face.
The font appears designed to reinterpret slab serif structure through a minimalist, monoline construction and italicized, wide proportions, emphasizing crisp geometry and memorable terminals. Its intent seems focused on creating a high-style, attention-grabbing voice with a strong, consistent system of angular details.
The design maintains a consistent geometric logic across caps, lowercase, and numerals, with recurring spur-like terminals that act as a signature detail. In text, the thin strokes and extended terminals create a distinctive texture and a lively, slightly prickly edge that is more expressive than neutral.