Solid Wejo 8 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, packaging, game titles, chunky, playful, retro, toybox, cartoon, attention grabbing, quirky display, hand-cut feel, retro flavor, rounded corners, soft geometry, blobby, stencil-like, blocky.
A chunky, block-built display face with softly rounded corners and irregular, hand-cut-looking notches throughout. Many letters show collapsed counters or small punched apertures, creating a solid, cutout-like silhouette rather than open bowls. Stems are heavy and mostly rectilinear, but edges wobble slightly and corners are blunted, producing an intentionally imperfect rhythm. Proportions vary from glyph to glyph, with compact widths and occasional protrusions that give the alphabet a lumpy, sculpted texture.
Best suited for large display settings where the chunky silhouettes and carved details can read clearly—posters, headlines, title cards, logo marks, packaging, and playful branding. It also fits event graphics, stickers/merch, and game or kids-oriented interfaces where a bold, characterful voice is needed.
The overall tone is playful and slightly mischievous, like foam letters, cut-paper signage, or a retro arcade/title-card aesthetic. Its irregular cut-ins and dense black shapes feel bold and attention-seeking, while the softened corners keep it friendly rather than aggressive. The look suggests handcrafted novelty and a deliberately quirky personality.
Likely designed to deliver maximum impact with a compact, solid footprint while adding personality through irregular cutouts and softened geometry. The aim appears to be a distinctive novelty display style that feels handcrafted and retro-leaning, prioritizing character and texture over continuous-text readability.
At text sizes, the dense interiors and minimal openings can reduce letter distinctness, but the strong silhouettes remain recognizable in short phrases. The font’s visual identity comes from repeated notch motifs and occasional pinhole counters, which add texture but also create a deliberately “imperfect” cadence across words.