Slab Square Pepi 6 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, signage, packaging, logos, industrial, retro, mechanical, technical, sturdy, display impact, industrial styling, geometric uniformity, signage clarity, octagonal, angular, chamfered, blocky, high-contrast (shape).
A sturdy slab-serif design with mostly uniform stroke weight and a wide stance. Letterforms lean on squared geometry and frequent chamfered (octagonal) corners, giving rounds like O/C/G and numerals a clipped, engineered feel. Serifs are bold and rectangular with flat ends, and the overall construction is crisp and modular, with generous counters and clear interior space. The texture in text is rhythmic and even, with strong horizontals, squared terminals, and consistent corner treatment across caps, lowercase, and figures.
Best suited to headlines and display settings where its slab structure and chamfered geometry can carry personality at size. It works well for signage, labels, packaging, and logo wordmarks that want a tough, technical, or vintage-industrial voice. For longer passages, it benefits from comfortable sizes and spacing to keep the dense, blocky shapes from feeling heavy.
The font conveys an industrial, mechanical tone—confident, utilitarian, and slightly retro. Its angular cut corners and bold slabs suggest machine labeling, workshop signage, and vintage equipment, balancing friendliness with a hard-edged, technical character.
The design appears intended to merge traditional slab-serif sturdiness with a distinctly squared, machined geometry. By standardizing flat terminals and clipped corners, it aims for high impact and strong reproducibility across prominent text applications.
Uppercase forms read especially rigid and architectural, while the lowercase keeps the same corner logic for a cohesive system. Numerals continue the clipped-corner motif (notably 0, 2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 9), reinforcing a display-forward, constructed aesthetic.