Slab Contrasted Favo 6 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, packaging, signage, western, circus, vintage, playful, poster, thematic display, vintage revival, high impact, distinctive texture, woodtype, blocky, chunky, ink-trap, notched.
A heavy, blocky slab-serif display face with broad rectangular stems, squared terminals, and prominent bracketless slabs. The letterforms are punctuated by consistent notch-like cut-ins and wedge apertures that carve into joints and counters, creating a stenciled/woodcut rhythm without fully breaking strokes apart. Rounds are compact and somewhat squarish, while verticals stay dominant, producing a dense, high-impact texture. Spacing reads tight and the silhouettes remain highly uniform, prioritizing bold mass and graphic punch over delicate detail.
Best suited to short, prominent text where its dense weight and decorative cut-ins can be appreciated—posters, headlines, branding marks, labels, and display signage. It can also work as an accent face for pull quotes or section headers when paired with a simpler text companion.
The overall tone feels showmanlike and theatrical—evoking western posters, circus bills, and vintage woodtype printing. The carved notches add a crafty, hand-worked flavor that reads nostalgic and slightly mischievous, making the font feel energetic and attention-seeking rather than neutral or refined.
The design appears intended to reinterpret bold slab-serif display traditions with a carved, ornamental motif that boosts recognizability and vintage character. It aims for maximum impact and a distinctive silhouette, trading fine typographic subtlety for strong poster presence and themed atmosphere.
The distinctive cut-in shapes recur across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals, giving the set a strong internal logic and immediate recognizability. Counters are kept relatively small for the weight, and the numerals follow the same chunky, poster-oriented construction for consistent headline use.