Slab Unbracketed Surur 12 is a very light, very wide, monoline, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: tech branding, sci-fi titles, posters, logotypes, packaging, technical, futuristic, schematic, precise, angular, sci-fi aesthetic, technical labeling, geometric display, engineered tone, slab serif, unbracketed, oblique stress, geometric, squared counters.
A very light, monoline slab-serif design with a pronounced rightward slant and sharp, unbracketed serifs that read as flat terminals. Letterforms are built from straight segments and crisp corners, with squared bowls and counters (notably in O, Q, and numerals), and minimal curvature overall. Horizontal strokes and slab feet are thin but clearly articulated, giving a slightly "drafted" feel; joins are clean and mostly orthogonal, and spacing is open to accommodate the wide construction. The rhythm is consistent across cases, with compact apertures and boxy internal shapes contributing to a mechanical, grid-like texture in text.
Best suited to display contexts where its angular slabs and italicized, wide stance can read as a stylistic signal—such as technology branding, science-fiction or industrial-themed titles, posters, and packaging. It can also work for short blocks of text at larger sizes when a crisp, schematic texture is desired.
The overall tone is technical and futuristic, evoking CAD lettering, instrumentation labels, and retro sci‑fi titling. Its angularity and tight geometry feel deliberate and engineered rather than calligraphic, lending a precise, schematic character even in longer passages.
The design appears intended to translate slab-serif structure into a highly geometric, drafted idiom: light strokes, squared counters, and unbracketed terminals combine to create a distinctive, engineered voice optimized for attention-grabbing headings and stylized wordmarks.
Uppercase forms emphasize straight-sided geometry, while lowercase keeps the same squared logic, producing a cohesive, systemized look across the set. Numerals are similarly constructed with flat terminals and boxy counters, reinforcing the engineered aesthetic.