Slab Square Voris 4 is a very light, very wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, branding, packaging, posters, technical, minimal, futuristic, architectural, industrial, modernize slab, grid precision, technical tone, minimal display, monoline, square serif, rounded corners, geometric, linear.
A very thin, monoline slab-serif design with square, flat-ended terminals and a distinctly geometric construction. Strokes maintain an even weight with low contrast, and many joins resolve into crisp right angles softened by small radiused corners. The letterforms are wide and open, with generous interior space and a measured, engineered rhythm; curves (as in C, D, O, and lower-case bowls) read as squarish and rounded-rectangle in spirit. Serifs are compact and straight, functioning like small horizontal caps that emphasize a grid-like structure and keep the overall texture airy.
Best suited for display contexts where its fine strokes and geometric slab details can be appreciated—headlines, logos, packaging, posters, and title treatments. It can also work for short UI labels or technical diagrams at larger sizes, where its clean, squared forms read clearly.
The font conveys a technical, schematic mood—clean, disciplined, and slightly futuristic. Its hairline strokes and squared geometry feel precise and instrument-like, suggesting drafting, interface labeling, or engineered product aesthetics rather than expressive handwriting or traditional book typography.
The design appears intended to merge slab-serif cues with a rectilinear, squared construction, creating an engineered look that stays airy and modern. The consistent monoline weight and controlled corners suggest a focus on precision and a contemporary, industrial voice.
In text, the light strokes keep the page color very pale, while the squared bowls and compact slab accents give words a modular, almost monospaced impression even though widths vary. The numerals follow the same rectilinear logic, with clean, squared counters and a consistent mechanical tone across letters and figures.