Slab Square Vesy 5 is a very light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, packaging, editorial accents, technical, architectural, austere, retro, geometric rigor, technical clarity, display impact, modernist restraint, square-serif, hairline, geometric, angular, crisp.
A very thin, monoline slab-serif design with sharply squared terminals and a consistent stroke weight. Forms are predominantly rectilinear, with corners that feel engineered rather than calligraphic; curves (as in C, G, S, and numerals) are restrained and often resolve into flat, squared ends. Serifs read as small horizontal bars that extend cleanly from stems, giving the glyphs a schematic, constructed look. Proportions are orderly and slightly narrow, with open counters and ample internal space that keeps the hairline strokes from clogging in the sample text.
This face is best suited to display settings where its hairline slabs and square construction can be appreciated: headlines, posters, logotypes, packaging, and editorial pull quotes. It can work for short passages at generous sizes and spacing, especially in clean layouts that benefit from a technical, architectural voice.
The overall tone is precise and systematic, suggesting drafting tools, diagrams, and early digital or industrial signage. Its strict geometry and hairline weight create a cool, minimalist mood with a subtle retro-technical flavor rather than warmth or expressiveness.
The design appears intended to translate slab-serif structure into a pared-down, geometric system: thin strokes, flat-ended detailing, and consistent right-angled logic. It emphasizes clarity and constructed form over traditional contrast or calligraphic modulation.
The lowercase shows single-storey forms in places (notably the a) and maintains the same squared, built-up logic as the caps, which reinforces a consistent, modular rhythm in text. Numerals follow the same thin, angular construction, with simple, legible silhouettes and flat terminals.