Slab Square Podi 8 is a bold, very narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, signage, logotypes, packaging, industrial, western, retro, authoritative, mechanical, compact impact, poster display, signage feel, vintage utility, condensed, square-serifed, angular, stencil-like, high-contrast corners.
A condensed, square-built display face with rigid verticals, flat slab-like serifs, and mostly uniform stroke weight. Forms are constructed from straight segments with tight interior counters and sharp 90° turns, producing a strong, modular silhouette. Curves are minimized and when present (as in bowls) they read as squared-off ovals; terminals tend to end bluntly with small slab projections. Spacing is compact and the rhythm is tall and vertical, with narrow apertures and a consistently engineered feel across uppercase, lowercase, and figures.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as headlines, posters, storefront or wayfinding signage, and logo wordmarks where its condensed width and hard-edged slabs can carry across at larger sizes. It can also work for packaging and labels that aim for a retro-industrial or western-inspired look, while longer passages may feel dense due to the tight apertures and compact rhythm.
The overall tone feels industrial and assertive, with a vintage poster and woodtype sensibility. Its narrow, squared forms convey a mechanical precision that can read as utilitarian, old-west, or retro signage depending on context. The bold, rigid presence gives headlines a commanding, no-nonsense voice.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum presence in a narrow footprint, combining squared construction and slab-like finishing for a sturdy, poster-ready voice. Its consistent, engineered geometry suggests a deliberate nod to vintage display lettering and signage traditions while prioritizing strong vertical emphasis and compact set-width.
Uppercase and lowercase share a closely related construction, helping mixed-case settings maintain a uniform, condensed texture. The numerals follow the same squared geometry and tall proportions, keeping lines of text visually consistent in display sizes.