Slab Square Very 7 is a very light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, signage, editorial text, technical docs, posters, technical, modernist, precise, institutional, calm, clarity, systematic, modern utility, structured tone, geometric voice, square serif, rectilinear, rounded corners, open counters, high contrast (shape).
A very light, monoline slab-serif design built from rectilinear strokes and flat, square-ended terminals. Serifs read as short horizontal slabs, often with softly rounded outer corners that keep the geometry from feeling brittle. Curves are largely squared-off into rounded rectangles (notably in C, G, O, Q, and the numerals), giving the face a tidy, engineered rhythm. Proportions are fairly narrow and consistent, with generous internal counters and clear joins that preserve legibility at text sizes despite the thin stroke weight.
This font suits UI labels, dashboards, and product typography where a precise, engineered look is desirable. It also works for signage and wayfinding, technical documentation, and editorial pull quotes where the light monoline color and squared forms create a crisp, organized page. At larger sizes it can lend a minimalist, architectural feel to posters and headings.
The overall tone is clean and technical, with a restrained, utilitarian personality. Its squared forms suggest contemporary signage and interface typography, while the slab details add a faintly archival, typewriter-adjacent seriousness without becoming nostalgic.
The design appears intended to merge slab-serif structure with square, rounded-rectangle geometry for a contemporary, system-like voice. The very light monoline stroke and open counters prioritize clarity and a controlled texture, while the slab terminals provide alignment and a subtle anchoring on the baseline.
Distinctive glyph cues include a rounded-rect zero, a Q with a small tail dropping from the bottom, and an angular Y and V that emphasize the face’s geometric construction. The lowercase keeps the same squared logic, producing a consistent texture in mixed-case settings.