Serif Other Fure 2 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: magazine headlines, fashion branding, posters, packaging, titles, fashion, dramatic, editorial, luxury, theatrical, standout display, luxury cue, editorial punch, stylized classic, high-waist, tapered, calligraphic, sharp, flared.
This serif italic shows a strongly stylized, high-fashion construction with narrow proportions and pronounced, blade-like terminals. Strokes taper aggressively into hairline points, then swell into dark, sculpted wedges, creating a crisp, cut-paper silhouette rather than conventional bracketed serifs. Curves are tight and controlled, with frequent teardrop joins and sheared entry/exit strokes that emphasize a forward slant. Uppercase forms feel tall and display-oriented, while the lowercase keeps a compact, readable skeleton but with many sharp finish strokes and asymmetric details that add visual sparkle across words and lines.
Best suited to display settings such as magazine and editorial headlines, fashion and beauty branding, campaign posters, and upscale packaging where its sharp terminals and energetic rhythm can read as intentional detail. It can also work for short pull quotes or title cards when given enough size and breathing room to prevent the fine points from visually crowding.
The overall tone is glamorous and theatrical—more runway editorial than bookish tradition. Its razor-edged terminals and sculpted contrast cues suggest couture, nightlife, and headline drama, projecting a confident, slightly mischievous elegance.
The letterforms appear designed to reinterpret a classic italic serif through a decorative, razor-cut terminal language, prioritizing expressive texture and luxury signaling over neutral body-text restraint. The consistent forward motion and sculpted endings suggest an intention to deliver instant recognition in branding and headline contexts.
Several letters incorporate distinctive pinched counters and pointed internal notches that create strong texture at larger sizes. Numerals match the italic energy with angled stress and sharp finishing strokes, supporting cohesive titling systems. The design’s personality is carried by its terminals and joins, so spacing and setting at display sizes will highlight the intended rhythmic flicker.