Slab Contrasted Nowa 1 is a very bold, narrow, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, logos, signage, playful, retro, chunky, whimsical, bold, attention, personality, retro feel, branding, rounded, bracketed, soft corners, bubbly, decorative.
A very heavy, compact display face with rounded, slab-like terminals and pronounced internal cut-ins that create a distinctive “pinched” waist through many letters. Stems are thick and softly squared, with tight counters and teardrop-to-rectangular inner shapes that emphasize a strong black footprint. Curves are inflated and smooth (notably in C, O, S), while joins and terminals feel consistently blunted, giving the set a unified, chunky rhythm. The overall construction reads as condensed and upright, with sturdy verticals, small apertures, and a deliberate pattern of inward notches that becomes a key part of the texture in text.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as posters, headlines, brand marks, packaging, and signage where its bold silhouettes and decorative cut-ins can be appreciated. It can work for playful editorial callouts or event materials, but the tight counters and strong internal notches suggest avoiding long body copy or very small sizes.
The tone is exuberant and characterful, leaning toward retro signage and novelty display lettering. Its heavy mass and quirky pinched details make it feel friendly and theatrical rather than formal, with a strong, attention-grabbing presence that reads as fun and slightly eccentric.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum personality and recognition through extreme weight, condensed proportions, and a signature system of inward notches paired with rounded slab-like terminals. It prioritizes distinctive texture and memorable word shapes over neutral readability, targeting expressive display typography.
The repeated waist-like cut-ins create a strong horizontal beat across words, producing a patterned color and a distinctive silhouette in mixed-case text. Numerals share the same chunky, rounded construction, keeping the overall voice consistent for headlines that mix letters and figures.