Slab Square Sipi 2 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, logos, book covers, playful, quirky, retro, handmade, poster-like, novelty display, retro flavor, hand-cut look, attention grabbing, blocky, angular, slab-serif, irregular baseline, wobbly.
A chunky slab-serif display face with squarish counters, heavy rectangular stems, and flat, block-cut terminals. The letterforms are intentionally uneven: verticals lean subtly, widths vary from glyph to glyph, and many shapes look slightly warped as if cut from paper or stamped, creating a lively rhythm. Corners are mostly sharp with occasional notched or chiseled joins, and the overall construction favors compact, geometric silhouettes over smooth curves.
Best suited to display settings such as posters, headlines, event promos, packaging, and logo wordmarks where its chunky slabs and quirky rhythm can be appreciated. It also works well for short pull quotes or playful titling, especially when a retro or handcrafted mood is desired.
The font reads bold and mischievous, with a cartoony, homemade flavor. Its jittery alignment and irregular geometry evoke retro novelty signage and hand-set type, giving copy an energetic, slightly anarchic tone that feels more fun than formal.
The design appears intended to blend slab-serif solidity with a deliberately imperfect, hand-cut aesthetic, prioritizing personality and visual punch over strict typographic regularity. Its geometry and uneven cadence suggest a novelty display face built to add character and a vintage-leaning, playful edge to branding and titles.
The texture is driven by inconsistent stroke alignment and deliberately imperfect symmetry, which adds character at larger sizes but can make long passages feel busy. Numerals and capitals maintain the same blocky, cut-out logic, helping headlines and short phrases feel cohesive.