Slab Square Udnoh 7 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, labels, signage, typewriter, industrial, utilitarian, retro, quirky, typewriter look, rugged display, analog texture, mechanical clarity, slab serif, blunt, chunky, ink-trap feel, rounded corners.
A wide, monospaced slab serif with sturdy, blunt serifs and largely uniform stroke thickness. Forms are built from simple, squared-off strokes that read as slightly softened at the corners, with a subtle inky quality in joins and terminals. The overall rhythm is steady and mechanical, while the alphabet shows a deliberately uneven baseline/tilt effect in setting, giving the shapes a lightly jostled texture without becoming cursive or calligraphic.
Works well for short-to-medium text where a strong, mechanical voice is desired—posters, product labels, packaging, signage, and bold UI callouts. The monospaced spacing and sturdy serifs also suit code-like layouts or typewriter-themed compositions where consistent character width is a feature.
The font feels like a rugged typewriter or stamped-letter aesthetic—practical and workmanlike, but with a playful wobble that adds personality. It suggests analog printing, signage, and utilitarian tools rather than polished editorial typography.
Likely designed to deliver a typewriter/industrial slab feel in a monospaced structure, emphasizing blunt terminals and a robust texture for strong display impact. The slight irregularity appears intended to evoke analog output and add warmth without sacrificing clarity.
Counters stay open and legible, and the numerals share the same stout, slabbed construction as the letters. The texture in paragraphs is bold and even, with the intentional irregularity adding a hand-set or distressed impression while maintaining clear character recognition.