Slab Contrasted Kokal 7 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: code samples, tables, terminal ui, labels, posters, typewriter, industrial, utilitarian, retro, authoritative, mechanical clarity, system typography, typewriter revival, robust legibility, slab serif, bold serifs, boxy, sturdy, ink-trap feel.
A sturdy slab-serif design with pronounced, rectangular serifs and a largely uniform stroke weight. The letterforms lean toward square, engineered geometry, with tight interior counters and blunt terminals that keep the texture dense and consistent. Curves are controlled rather than calligraphic, and joins often read as slightly notched, giving a subtly ink-trap/printed-mechanical impression. Numerals and capitals present a firm, even rhythm with strong baseline presence and clear, block-like silhouettes.
Well-suited to contexts that benefit from an even, grid-friendly rhythm such as code snippets, console/terminal-style UI, data tables, forms, and technical documentation. The strong slabs also make it effective for utilitarian headlines, labeling, and retro-industrial poster treatments where a firm, mechanical texture is desirable.
The overall tone is pragmatic and workmanlike, evoking typewriter and stamped/printed matter rather than delicate editorial typography. Its heavy slabs and compact apertures lend a no-nonsense, slightly retro-industrial voice that feels dependable and plainspoken.
The design appears intended to deliver a robust, monospaced reading experience with emphatic slab serifs for structure and presence. It emphasizes mechanical consistency and practical legibility, echoing the look of typewritten or industrial print output while keeping forms straightforward and durable.
In text, the repeated slab rhythm creates a strong horizontal cadence and a dark, steady color. The shapes prioritize clarity through sturdy construction and consistent spacing, producing a mechanical regularity that reads as intentional and system-like rather than expressive.