Slab Unbracketed Ullun 4 is a very light, very narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, packaging, book covers, posters, whimsical, hand-drawn, storybook, quirky, delicate, handcrafted feel, quirky display, light texture, expressive serif, storybook tone, monoline, slab serif, spiky terminals, irregular rhythm, tall ascenders.
A tall, lightly drawn serif with a monoline feel and crisp, square slab-like serifs that often read as small spikes at stroke ends. Letterforms are narrow and airy, with generous internal space and a gently uneven rhythm that suggests hand-rendered construction rather than strict geometry. Curves are slightly lopsided and joins vary subtly, while straight strokes stay mostly vertical, giving the face an upright stance. In text, the line texture is open and granular, with distinctive capitals and narrow numerals that keep the overall color light.
Best suited for short to medium-length display settings where its quirky slabs and narrow proportions can add personality—titles, headings, packaging, posters, and book covers. It can also work for pull quotes or short passages when a light, whimsical texture is desired, but the thin strokes and irregular rhythm suggest avoiding very small sizes or dense, utilitarian text.
The font conveys a playful, eccentric tone—more storybook and quirky than formal. Its spindly slabs and subtly irregular outlines add charm and personality, giving it a friendly, handcrafted presence that feels expressive without becoming chaotic.
The design appears intended to merge a slab-serif structure with a hand-drawn, lightly irregular finish, prioritizing charm and individuality over strict typographic uniformity. Its narrow, airy construction and expressive terminals aim to create a distinctive voice for display typography while remaining broadly readable.
Serifs are generally unbracketed and square, but their length and angle fluctuate slightly, contributing to a scratchy, illustrative finish. Round letters like O/Q and the single-storey lowercase forms stand out as characterful, and the punctuation and numerals maintain the same wiry, calligraphic stiffness seen in the alphabet.