Stencil Leri 7 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, italic, tall x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, sports branding, game titles, packaging, industrial, aggressive, athletic, tactical, comic-book, impact, motion, stencil marking, attention-grab, slanted, chunky, oblique, angular, ink-trap.
A heavy, slanted display face with chunky, slightly rounded outer contours and sharp internal cuts. Strokes are interrupted by consistent stencil breaks that read as diagonal or vertical “bridges,” creating a segmented, mechanical rhythm across letters and figures. Counters are tight and often pinched by the cutouts, while terminals tend to be blunt and squared, keeping the texture dense even at larger sizes. The overall silhouette is compact and forward-leaning, with a punchy, high-impact word shape and strong black mass.
Best suited to headlines and short, high-impact lines where the stencil cuts can read clearly—posters, event graphics, sports identity systems, game and action-media titles, and bold packaging callouts. It can also work for badges, decals, and signage-style compositions that benefit from an industrial or tactical tone.
The stencil slicing and forward slant give it a tactical, industrial attitude—bold, energetic, and a bit combative. It evokes sport branding, action titles, and utilitarian marking systems, with a comic-book urgency that feels built for emphasis rather than neutrality.
Designed to deliver maximum visual punch through dense black shapes and signature stencil interruptions, while the slant adds motion and urgency. The consistent bridging suggests an intention to reference sprayed or cut lettering—industrial marking and action-oriented display typography—rather than continuous text reading.
The stencil breaks are a defining graphic feature and become more legible as scale increases; at smaller sizes the internal gaps can visually merge, making some letters and numerals feel tightly packed. Rounded bowls (like in O/Q) contrast with the hard, cut-through bridges, adding a distinctive “machined” look.