Slab Unbracketed Yadoh 11 is a regular weight, narrow, monoline, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, signage, packaging, headlines, logos, industrial, typewriter, mechanical, utilitarian, retro, compact impact, technical flavor, retro utility, labeling look, slab serif, square terminals, unbracketed, stencil-like, condensed.
A condensed, monoline slab-serif with a consistent stroke width and square, unbracketed serifs that read as small horizontal caps on many letters. Forms are slightly forward-leaning with a technical, constructed feel: straight stems, angular joins, and occasional notch-like interruptions that suggest a stencil or engineered drawing influence. Counters are compact and often squared-off, with simplified curves (notably in C, G, S) and pointed/angled geometry in letters like V, W, and Y. The rhythm is tight and vertical, with modest contrast and crisp terminals that keep the texture even at display sizes.
Best suited to display contexts where a compact, industrial voice is useful—posters, packaging, labels, and short headlines that benefit from strong structure in limited horizontal space. It can also work for logos/wordmarks that want a mechanical or vintage-technical flavor, while long-form text may feel dense due to the tight proportions and busy detailing.
The overall tone is mechanical and workmanlike, evoking utilitarian labeling, typewriter-era signage, and industrial graphics. Its narrow stance and rigid geometry give it a no-nonsense, retro-technical character that feels confident and slightly quirky rather than elegant.
The design appears intended to deliver a condensed, robust slab-serif look with an engineered, stencil-adjacent personality—prioritizing compactness, uniform stroke color, and distinctive angular details for attention in branding and signage.
Numerals and capitals share the same squared, constructed logic, helping headlines feel cohesive. The italic slant is subtle but persistent, adding motion without turning the face into a script-like texture.