Slab Square Udret 11 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, album art, sports branding, gothic, industrial, aggressive, retro, display impact, gothic revival, branding, poster drama, angular, faceted, chiseled, spurred, square-serifed.
A sharply slanted, heavy display face built from angular, faceted strokes and square-edged slab forms. Serifs read as flat, blocky terminals with pronounced spur-like corners, giving many joins a chiseled, notched feel. Curves are minimized into clipped diagonals and hard corners, producing a tight, rhythmic texture with strong black shapes and narrow internal counters. The overall construction feels rigid and engineered, with emphatic top bars and wedge-like diagonals that keep the silhouettes energetic even at uniform stroke weight.
Best suited to short, high-contrast applications such as posters, headlines, packaging callouts, and logo/wordmark work where the sharp silhouettes can carry the message. It also fits music and event branding, gaming/esports visuals, and other contexts that benefit from a tough, stylized gothic tone rather than extended reading.
The font projects a hard-edged, gothic-industrial attitude—forceful, dramatic, and slightly menacing. Its jagged detailing and steep slant add urgency and motion, evoking vintage blackletter poster energy filtered through a more mechanical, squared-off lens.
The design appears intended to deliver a modernized, squared blackletter flavor with maximum impact: bold, slanted letterforms, flattened slab terminals, and angular cuts that read as deliberate styling. The goal seems to be strong recognizability and a distinctive, hard-edged texture for display typography.
In the sample text, the dense shapes and sharp interior angles create a high-impact word image, but small counters and frequent notches can crowd at smaller sizes. Uppercase forms appear especially commanding, while lowercase retains the same angular vocabulary for a consistent, aggressive texture across mixed-case settings.