Slab Square Kozo 6 is a regular weight, narrow, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, posters, album art, branding, futuristic, art deco, tech, editorial, dramatic, display impact, modern deco, tech styling, graphic identity, geometric system, modular, geometric, stencil-like, inline, rounded corners.
This typeface pairs boxy, rounded-rectangle counters with razor-thin hairline connectors, creating an extreme thick–thin rhythm. Many letters are built from solid slab-like blocks interrupted by horizontal cut-ins, giving a modular, partially segmented construction. Strokes often terminate in flat, squared ends, while corners are softened into rounded shoulders; the combination yields a rigid geometry with a polished edge. Proportions read compact and condensed overall, but individual glyphs vary in internal width and spacing, producing a lively, irregular texture in lines of text.
Best suited to display settings where its distinctive thick–thin structure and segmented blocks can read clearly—such as headlines, poster typography, title cards, and logo or wordmark work. It can also add a stylized, high-design voice to packaging and editorial feature treatments when used at generous sizes.
The overall tone feels futuristic and metropolitan, with a strong Art Deco and sci‑fi display flavor. Its high-contrast, segmented forms suggest machinery, circuitry, and luxury signage, projecting a sense of sleek drama rather than everyday neutrality.
The design appears intended to reinterpret slab-like, geometric letterforms through a high-contrast, modular system, emphasizing striking silhouettes and a sleek, contemporary-Deco personality. Its construction prioritizes graphic identity and visual rhythm, aiming for memorable, sign-like presence in short text.
In text, the hairline elements and internal cut-ins become a key visual motif, forming a striped, stencil-like pattern across words. The design favors distinctive silhouettes and graphic impact over uniform color, making spacing and rhythm feel intentionally stylized.