Typewriter Haho 8 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, labels, editorial, headlines, retro, utilitarian, worn, human, rugged, typewriter evocation, analog texture, practical readability, vintage utility, rounded serifs, blunt terminals, soft corners, ink-trap feel, industrial.
A bold, monolinear slab-serif with rounded, blunted terminals and softly swelling joins that give the strokes a subtly worn, inked-in look. The letterforms are generously proportioned with open counters and a steady, mechanical rhythm, while the serifs read as sturdy pads rather than sharp brackets. Curves are slightly irregular and softened, producing an impression of pressure and print gain, especially noticeable in the round letters and the numerals.
It works well where a mechanical, vintage texture is desirable: posters, packaging, product labels, and editorial headlines. The chunky slabs and softened edges also make it effective for short paragraphs, pull quotes, or UI elements that want an intentionally analog, utilitarian voice.
The overall tone feels analog and workmanlike—like a well-used typewriter or stamped labeling system—mixing friendliness from the rounded corners with a tough, industrial solidity. It suggests archival documents, workshop tags, and retro paperwork rather than sleek contemporary minimalism.
The design appears intended to evoke mechanical typing and stamped printing, prioritizing consistent rhythm and a durable, inked texture over precision-sharp detail. Its softened slabs and slightly irregular feel aim to recreate the character of real-world impressions in a clean, repeatable digital form.
The font maintains consistent visual weight and spacing across upper- and lowercase, with distinctive slab feet on verticals and compact, sturdy numerals that sit firmly on the baseline. The punctuation and dots appear heavy and simple, reinforcing the practical, no-nonsense texture in text settings.