Serif Flared Fuha 2 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, signage, book covers, vintage, heraldic, dramatic, stately, whimsical, display impact, period flavor, brand character, decorative clarity, flared serifs, bracketed, bulbous, rounded, tapered.
A heavy display serif with flared, tapering terminals and softly bracketed serifs that create a sculpted, almost carved look. Strokes swell and narrow with a gentle modulation, and many joins are rounded, giving the letterforms a buoyant, bulbous silhouette rather than a rigid, rectilinear one. Counters are generally compact, while the outer curves (especially in C, G, S, and the numerals) are broad and emphatic, producing a strong, poster-ready texture. The lowercase shows sturdy, simplified forms with a compact rhythm and prominent terminals, keeping the overall color dense and consistent.
Best suited for headlines and short bursts of copy where its bold, flared detailing can be appreciated—posters, signage, packaging, and book or album covers. It can also work for pull quotes and section headers when a vintage, characterful voice is needed, but its dense texture makes it less ideal for long-form body text.
The tone feels old-world and ceremonial, with a touch of storybook eccentricity from the exaggerated flares and soft, inflated curves. It reads as confident and authoritative, yet playful enough to suggest folklore, taverns, or theatrical settings rather than corporate neutrality.
The design appears intended to evoke a traditional, engraved or woodtype-inspired presence while staying highly legible through simplified, robust shapes. Its flared terminals and rounded modulation seem aimed at delivering strong personality and historical resonance for display typography.
In text settings the dense letterspacing and weight create a dark, cohesive line, with distinctive flare shapes that remain visible even at smaller sizes. The numerals echo the same swelling, tapered logic, making them feel integrated and display-forward rather than purely utilitarian.