Slab Contrasted Jeho 1 is a very bold, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'TD Pobeda' by Tektov Dmitry Type (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, brand marks, packaging, signage, industrial, western, poster, retro, authoritative, high impact, space saving, vintage display, strong voice, signage clarity, condensed, slab serif, square serif, blocky, angular.
A tightly condensed slab-serif design with tall, rectangular proportions and a strong vertical rhythm. Strokes are mostly straight and geometric, with crisp corners and minimal curvature; terminals end in squared, block-like slabs that read as built-in caps rather than delicate serifs. Counters are narrow and often rectangular, with a slightly stepped, machined feel in joins and shoulders. Overall spacing is compact and the silhouette stays rigid and columnar, giving lines of text a dense, uniform texture.
Best used for headlines, posters, signage, packaging, and logo lockups where a compact width and strong vertical presence are advantageous. It performs well in short to medium display lines that need a forceful, high-impact voice, and it can also serve as an accent type in editorial layouts when paired with a more neutral text face.
The face projects an industrial, no-nonsense tone with echoes of wood type and old poster lettering. Its sharp geometry and heavy slabs create a bold, assertive voice that can feel Western, vintage, and slightly militaristic depending on context. The condensed build adds urgency and punch, making the style feel suited to attention-grabbing display settings.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact in minimal horizontal space, using heavy slabs and squared geometry to maintain legibility and authority at display sizes. Its consistent, engineered shapes suggest a goal of evoking vintage poster and wood-type traditions while keeping the forms clean and structurally modern.
Distinctive, narrow apertures and boxed-in counters can reduce clarity at smaller sizes, especially in dense passages. The figures and capitals share the same upright, rectangular construction, helping headings and numeric-heavy copy feel consistent and emphatic.