Slab Weird Upla 11 is a very bold, wide, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, packaging, album covers, playful, retro, quirky, energetic, bold, standout display, retro novelty, expressive branding, motion energy, slab serif, soft corners, ink trap feel, swashy cuts, bouncy rhythm.
A very heavy, right-leaning slab serif with compact counters and chunky, sculpted terminals. Strokes are broadly geometric but interrupted by distinctive horizontal cut-ins and notches that create a layered, almost inlaid look across bowls and stems. The serifs read as blocky wedges with softened corners, and joins often form sharp internal angles that heighten the cutout effect. Overall spacing and letterforms feel intentionally irregular, giving the line a bouncy texture while maintaining a consistent, poster-forward silhouette.
Best suited to short, attention-grabbing settings such as posters, event titles, packaging, and logo wordmarks where the cutout details can read clearly. It can also work for album/film titles or social graphics that benefit from a quirky, retro display voice.
The font projects a playful, slightly rebellious tone with a retro display flavor. Its carved-in details and springy rhythm suggest novelty signage, toy-like branding, and expressive headlines rather than sober text work.
The design appears intended as an unconventional slab display that combines chunky, high-impact forms with decorative internal carving to create instant recognizability at large sizes. The rightward slant and rhythmic irregularities seem chosen to add motion and personality without losing the strong blocky presence.
Round letters like O/Q show prominent horizontal apertures, and several capitals feature pronounced internal breaks that become a key identifying motif. Numerals and lowercase follow the same cut-and-notch logic, keeping the set visually cohesive even as widths and interior shapes vary.