Slab Rounded Ulsi 2 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, logos, signage, medieval, gothic, vintage, rugged, storybook, thematic display, heritage tone, high impact, decorative texture, blackletter, rounded, ball terminals, slab serifs, high contrast joints.
A blackletter-influenced display face with sturdy, mostly even strokes and compact, angular letterforms. The design uses squared, slab-like serifs and frequent rounded ball terminals, creating a distinctive mix of sharp corners and softened endpoints. Counters are relatively small and the interior shapes tend toward diamond and wedge forms, while verticals remain dominant and rhythmically consistent across the alphabet. Lowercase follows the same constructed feel, with a clearly double-storey-style, vertical-heavy structure in letters like m and n and a simplified, upright flow overall. Numerals echo the same faceted geometry and terminal treatment, keeping the set visually unified.
Best suited for display use such as headlines, posters, labels, and identity marks where its blackletter flavor and strong texture can read at size. It also fits packaging, signage, and themed materials that benefit from an Old World or folkloric mood, while longer passages may feel heavy due to the dense letterforms.
The tone feels medieval and heraldic, with a vintage, Old World gravitas that reads as traditional and slightly rugged rather than delicate. Rounded terminals add approachability to the otherwise Gothic structure, lending a storybook and craft-signage character that can feel theatrical or ceremonial depending on context.
The design appears intended to reinterpret a traditional blackletter voice with sturdier, simplified construction and softened terminals for a more contemporary, approachable display texture. Its consistent stroke weight and repeated terminal motifs suggest a focus on bold readability and strong thematic atmosphere in titles and branding.
In text settings the dense texture and tight internal spaces create strong color and impact, especially at larger sizes. The distinctive ball terminals and slab-like feet become a defining motif, giving headings a stamped, emblematic presence while maintaining clear letter separation in short phrases.