Slab Square Sunuj 1 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Multiple' by Latinotype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: editorial, book text, magazines, posters, branding, heritage, bookish, confident, warm, italic emphasis, editorial voice, sturdy readability, classic slab feel, slab serif, bracketed slabs, oblique stress, robust, compact serifs.
A sturdy italic slab serif with broad, confident strokes and low contrast. The letterforms lean consistently forward, with bracketed, blocky serifs that read as squared and supportive rather than razor-sharp. Counters are open and the curves are generously rounded, while joins and terminals stay firm and slightly blunt, giving the design a dependable, print-forward texture. Overall proportions feel balanced with a moderate x-height and clear differentiation across capitals, lowercase, and numerals.
Well-suited to editorial typography where an italic voice needs to carry real weight—magazine features, pull quotes, and subheads—as well as packaging and brand systems that want a classic slab serif flavor. It also works for longer-form reading in moderate sizes when a sturdier, more characterful italic is desired.
The font conveys an editorial, slightly vintage tone—confident and readable, with a classic “ink on paper” presence. Its italic slant adds motion and emphasis without becoming flamboyant, making it feel energetic yet grounded. The slab structure lends a practical, no-nonsense voice that still feels warm and familiar.
The design appears intended as a readable, authoritative italic slab serif that combines traditional serif cues with a robust, squared-off construction. It aims to provide emphasis and motion while keeping strong typographic stability for practical publishing and display use.
In the sample text, the rhythm stays even in longer passages, with strong word shapes and stable baseline behavior. The italics are true to the design (not merely slanted), maintaining consistent serif logic and stroke endings across the set.