Solid Tela 7 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Habana Deco ML' by HiH and 'Arbotek' by Type-Ø-Tones (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, packaging, stickers, playful, chunky, retro, toylike, posterish, impact, novelty, display, silhouette-first, quirk, soft corners, geometric, blobby, stencil-like, notched.
A heavy, geometric display design built from broad, mostly monoline shapes with soft rounding and frequent triangular notches. Counters are largely collapsed into small cut-ins, pinholes, or side bites rather than open interior spaces, producing dense silhouettes and a strong spot-color effect. Curves tend toward near-circular bowls, while straight strokes end in blunt terminals; many joins are simplified into blocky intersections. The rhythm is intentionally irregular: widths and internal cutouts vary by glyph, and several characters use asymmetric bites or wedge cuts that create a carved, modular feel.
Best suited to large-scale display use where its solid silhouettes and small cut-ins can be appreciated—posters, headlines, branding marks, and punchy packaging. It can also work for short, playful titling in games or children’s/novelty-themed graphics, but the collapsed counters make it less appropriate for long text or small sizes.
The overall tone is bold and humorous, evoking mid-century sign lettering, toy packaging, and cartoonish poster typography. Its filled-in interiors and cutout details give it a slightly mischievous, quirky personality that reads as decorative rather than neutral.
This font appears designed to maximize impact and graphic presence through near-solid letterforms, using notched cutouts to preserve character differentiation while keeping the overall texture bold and compact. The intent reads as intentionally quirky and decorative, prioritizing silhouette and rhythm over conventional readability.
The alphabet shows consistent use of small negative wedges and side notches across both uppercase and lowercase, helping unify the set despite the intentionally uneven proportions. Numerals follow the same solid, cut-in counter strategy, keeping the texture uniform in dense settings.