Slab Rounded Tebi 6 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, branding, labels, typewriter, retro, friendly, quirky, casual, nostalgia, approachability, stamp effect, practicality, legibility, rounded slabs, soft corners, blunt serifs, ball terminals, inky.
A slab-serif design with sturdy, low-contrast strokes and generously rounded corners that soften the overall texture. Serifs are bold and blunt with a slightly cushioned feel, and several joins and terminals show subtle ball-like swelling, contributing to an inky, stamped impression. Proportions are compact with a steady rhythm and clear counters; forms favor straightforward geometry over sharp refinement, keeping curves and shoulders broad and readable. Numerals and capitals share the same robust, rounded slab voice, producing a cohesive, slightly irregular typographic color reminiscent of mechanical printing.
This face works well for headlines and short-to-medium text where a friendly, vintage-leaning slab presence is desired, such as posters, packaging, labels, café menus, and brand collateral. Its bold, rounded serifs help hold up in display sizes and in high-contrast printing contexts where a stamped or typewritten feel supports the message.
The tone is warm and approachable, channeling a retro typewriter and rubber-stamp sensibility rather than polished editorial elegance. Its rounded slabs and soft terminals add charm and a lightly playful character, giving text a human, informal voice.
The design appears intended to blend the solidity of a slab serif with rounded, tactile finishing to evoke typewriter-era practicality and approachable nostalgia. It prioritizes sturdy legibility and a distinctive, slightly “inked” personality over fine detail or high-contrast refinement.
The heavy serif presence and rounded detailing create strong word shapes and a dark, even color in paragraphs. The character set shown suggests an intentionally simple, workmanlike construction where softness comes from corner rounding and terminal swelling rather than stroke contrast.