Slab Contrasted Ulha 5 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Kate Slab Pro Expanded' by Monday Type (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, signage, assertive, industrial, poster-ready, collegiate, retro, impact, authority, display emphasis, sturdy readability, heritage feel, blocky, square-shouldered, bracketed, compact counters, heavy serifs.
This typeface is a hefty slab serif with strong, rectangular proportions and a pronounced horizontal emphasis. Strokes show clear, moderate contrast, with thick stems and sturdy slab terminals that feel slightly bracketed rather than purely mechanical. The geometry is broad and stable: bowls and counters are relatively compact, apertures stay fairly tight, and curves are reinforced by flat-ish joins that keep the overall texture dense. Spacing appears built for impact, producing a dark, even typographic color in lines of text.
Best suited to large-scale typography where its heavy slabs and broad stance can do the work: headlines, posters, signage, and punchy brand or packaging statements. It can also serve as a strong editorial display face for section titles and pull quotes when paired with a lighter companion for body text.
The tone is confident and no-nonsense, combining a traditional slab-serif backbone with a bold, attention-grabbing presence. It reads as classic and workmanlike, with a hint of collegiate or sports-display energy—ideal when you want text to feel solid, dependable, and loud without becoming decorative.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact through a wide, sturdy slab-serif structure and controlled contrast, prioritizing authority and legibility in display settings. Its consistent, block-like construction suggests a focus on dependable readability and a timeless, industrial-leaning character rather than delicate refinement.
In the sample text, the weight and tight interior spaces create a strong headline texture; at smaller sizes the dense counters and heavy serifs may benefit from generous leading and tracking. Numerals share the same sturdy, squared construction, keeping the overall voice consistent across alphanumerics.