Slab Contrasted Fusy 4 is a very bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Quadon' by René Bieder (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, sports, branding, packaging, western, circus, poster, athletic, retro, wood-type revival, high impact, vintage flavor, signage, chunky, blocky, bracketed, rounded, ink-trap.
A heavy, block-driven slab serif with broad proportions and compact counters. The serifs are square and sturdy with subtle bracketing, while many joins show small notches and cut-ins that create a carved, ink-trap-like texture. Curves (C, G, O) are rounded but remain strongly squared-off in their overall silhouette, and terminals tend to end in blunt, horizontal slabs. Lowercase forms are robust and simplified, with a single-storey a and g and a generally compact, billboard-oriented rhythm.
Best suited for display settings such as posters, headlines, logos, and bold packaging where impact and character are priorities. It also fits sports or collegiate-style graphics and retro-themed branding, especially in short lines or large sizes where its notched details stay crisp.
The overall tone is loud, assertive, and nostalgic, evoking classic wood-type and show-poster lettering. Its decorative notches and chunky slabs give it a playful, performative feel associated with Western, circus, and vintage athletic graphics.
The design appears intended to reinterpret bold slab-serif wood-type for modern display use, combining solid, sign-ready shapes with small carved details that add texture and period flavor without sacrificing overall readability at large sizes.
The numerals match the headline character: thick, wide, and highly stable, with minimal interior space. The design reads best when set with generous spacing, where the cut-in details and slab terminals remain distinct rather than crowding together.