Slab Square Pehe 11 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Faraon' by Latinotype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: editorial, magazines, headlines, text, posters, institutional, bookish, authoritative, classic, readability, editorial voice, sturdy display, clear branding, sturdy, bracketed, robust, even rhythm, high legibility.
A sturdy slab-serif with bold, squared serifs and an even, low-contrast stroke structure. The letterforms feel generously proportioned, with broad capitals and comfortable lowercase spacing that creates a steady horizontal rhythm in text. Serifs read as substantial and largely flat-ended, while joins and curves are smooth and controlled, giving counters a clean, open appearance. Numerals match the same solid construction and sit confidently alongside the text, reinforcing a consistent, no-nonsense texture.
Well-suited to editorial design where a strong typographic voice is needed without sacrificing readability, such as magazine layouts, essays, and pull quotes. Its robust slabs also make it effective for headlines, posters, and packaging-style titling where clear letterforms and a confident presence are priorities.
The overall tone is dependable and editorial, with a traditional, institutional confidence. It suggests printed matter and established communication—serious but not severe—thanks to its friendly proportions and steady, readable color. The slab presence adds a mild industrial sturdiness while staying within a classic, book-oriented voice.
Likely designed to deliver a classic slab-serif authority with modern practicality: bold enough to hold attention, but structured for clear, steady reading in continuous text. The emphasis appears to be on durable shapes, consistent rhythm, and a reliable typographic color across a wide range of common glyphs.
In paragraph settings the heavy serifs create a pronounced baseline and cap-line structure, lending clarity at larger sizes and a distinctive, slightly chunky texture. The design favors consistency and legibility over delicate detail, making it feel stable and workmanlike across mixed-case text and figures.