Slab Square Peha 6 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Peckham' by Los Andes (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, editorial, branding, packaging, posters, sturdy, confident, traditional, no-nonsense, readability, authority, durability, clarity, bracketless, blocky, robust, open counters, strong serifs.
A sturdy slab serif with heavy, square-cut serifs and largely uniform stroke weight. The letterforms are open and generously spaced, with broad proportions and a steady, even rhythm across the alphabet. Curves are round but controlled, and terminals resolve into flat, rectangular ends that reinforce a solid, built-from-parts feeling. Lowercase forms read clearly at text sizes, with simple, workmanlike joins and prominent serifed stems.
Well-suited to headlines and subheads where a strong, grounded voice is needed, and it also performs reliably in short-to-medium text blocks due to its open shapes and consistent weight. It can support branding and packaging that benefit from an assertive, classic slab-serif presence, and it scales nicely for poster-style typography.
The overall tone is confident and practical, with an authoritative, slightly old-school presence. Its squared finishing and steady color give it a dependable, institutional feel rather than a delicate or expressive one.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, dependable reading experience with a distinctly slab-serif backbone—prioritizing clarity and sturdiness while keeping details restrained and systematic.
The numerals share the same robust construction and large, clear shapes, helping maintain consistency in mixed text. In the text sample, the face holds a firm line and produces a dark, even typographic color without looking fussy.