Slab Square Pese 6 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Geometrico Slab' by FSdesign-Salmina (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, editorial, posters, branding, packaging, sturdy, traditional, authoritative, collegiate, impact, readability, classic tone, institutional voice, display strength, slab serif, bracketed slabs, high contrast, open counters, square terminals.
A robust slab-serif with broad proportions and a steady vertical stance. Strokes are mostly even, with subtly heavier joins and crisp, square-ended terminals that keep the texture firm and dark. Serifs are bold and blocky with gentle bracketing, giving corners a slightly softened transition rather than sharp mechanical cuts. Round letters (C, O, Q) are generously wide with open counters, while flat-sided shapes (E, F, H) maintain a strong, rectilinear rhythm. Numerals are weighty and clear, with a wide, stable “0” and straightforward, squared forms across the set.
Well-suited to headlines and subheads where a strong slab-serif voice is needed, as well as editorial display settings such as magazine titles and section openers. It can also support branding and packaging that call for a classic, trustworthy tone and bold typographic presence.
The overall tone feels solid and institutional, balancing classic print sensibility with a confident, no-nonsense presence. Its heavy slabs and wide stance project reliability and authority, with a familiar, bookish character that reads as traditional rather than experimental.
Likely designed to deliver a dependable slab-serif look with wide, confident proportions and emphatic serifs that hold up in display sizes. The shapes prioritize clarity and impact, aiming for a traditional, print-oriented feel with a firm, consistent rhythm.
The sample text shows a dense, even color with strong baseline presence and clear word shapes, helped by open bowls and prominent serifs. The lowercase maintains a practical, readable structure, and the punctuation and capital forms contribute to a serious, editorial voice.