Slab Square Imha 4 is a very bold, very wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, signage, sports, packaging, rugged, industrial, athletic, western, retro, impact, durability, display, branding, blocky, squared, chunky, mechanical, compact.
A heavy, block-built slab serif with squared outlines and softly rounded corners that keep the mass from feeling brittle. Strokes are consistently thick with minimal modulation, and the serifs read as broad, rectangular brackets that create a strong baseline and cap-line presence. Counters are tight and geometric, with wide, squared bowls (notably in O, 0, and 8) and short apertures that emphasize solidity over airiness. Overall spacing and rhythm favor dense, headline-oriented color, with sturdy verticals and flattened terminals that reinforce a machined, stencil-adjacent feel without obvious breaks.
Best suited for short, high-impact text such as headlines, posters, logo lockups, labels, and wayfinding or storefront signage. It performs well where a strong, industrial slab presence is desired—sports graphics, event promotions, product packaging, and bold editorial callouts—especially at medium to large sizes.
The tone is bold and utilitarian, suggesting durability and physicality. Its squared slabs and compact counters bring an industrial, workwear attitude, while the slightly softened corners add a friendly retro flavor. The overall impression fits sports branding and vintage signage—confident, loud, and built to be seen at a distance.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact through broad, square slabs and a dense typographic color, while keeping forms approachable via rounded corners and stable proportions. It aims for a practical, hard-working voice that reads quickly in display contexts and holds up in demanding branding environments.
The uppercase set feels especially dominant and rectangular, while the lowercase carries the same heavy structure with simplified, squat forms that maintain uniform texture in words. Numerals match the letters in weight and squareness, giving countdowns and score-style settings a cohesive, punchy look. At smaller sizes the tight counters may fill in, so it visually rewards larger point sizes and generous line spacing.