Slab Contrasted Ibka 5 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Boton' by Berthold, 'Dean Slab' by Blaze Type, 'Kondolar' by Cadson Demak, 'Orgon Slab' by Hoftype, 'DIN Next Slab' and 'Prelo Slab Pro' by Monotype, 'Offense' by Reserves, 'Kulturista' by Suitcase Type Foundry, and 'Palo Slab' by TypeUnion (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: sports branding, posters, headlines, packaging, editorial display, athletic, retro, assertive, industrial, headline, high impact, sport tone, vintage display, bold emphasis, motion, slab serif, blocky, bracketed, compact, sturdy.
A heavy, forward-leaning slab serif with compact proportions and stout, squared terminals. Serifs are bold and block-like with a slightly bracketed feel, and the overall stroke treatment stays fairly even, emphasizing mass and strong silhouette over delicate modulation. Counters are tight and rounded-rectangular, giving letters a dense, punchy texture in text. The italic is a true slant rather than a cursive construction, keeping forms rigid and engineered while adding momentum.
Best suited to display applications where impact is the priority: headlines, posters, sports branding, badges, and bold packaging callouts. It can work for short subheads or pull quotes when given extra spacing, but its dense color makes it less comfortable for long-form reading at smaller sizes.
The tone is bold and energetic, with a sporty, vintage flavor reminiscent of team graphics and mid-century advertising. Its dense rhythm and hard edges feel confident and no-nonsense, projecting impact and urgency. The slant adds motion, reinforcing a competitive, action-oriented voice.
The design appears intended to deliver a high-impact slab serif voice with forward motion—combining sturdy, blocky serifs and compact letterforms with an athletic slant for emphasis and immediacy. It aims for strong readability at large sizes while maintaining a distinctive, vintage-leaning personality.
In the sample text the weight and tight interior spaces create a dark typographic color, especially in longer lines; generous tracking and leading help it breathe. Numerals and capitals read particularly strong at display sizes, where the chunky serifs and angled stance become defining features.