Serif Flared Jisi 11 is a bold, wide, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, packaging, magazine covers, editorial, classic, confident, dramatic, sporty, impact, emphasis, heritage, motion, display, bracketed, calligraphic, swashy, wedge serif, energetic.
This typeface is a slanted serif with pronounced contrast between thick main strokes and finer connecting strokes. Serifs are wedge-like and often flared, with softened bracketing into the stems that gives terminals a carved, ink-trap-free look. The rhythm is assertive and forward-leaning, with generous set width and sturdy capitals; bowls and counters stay relatively open despite the weight. Curved letters show a slightly calligraphic modulation, and several glyphs feature lively terminals (notably in J, Q, f, g, y, and some numerals), reinforcing a display-oriented texture in running text.
Best suited to headlines and short-to-medium display settings where its contrast, flare, and slant can read as intentional style. It can also work for magazine covers, packaging, and branding wordmarks that want a classic yet forceful voice, and for pull quotes or section openers where emphasis and motion are desirable.
The overall tone feels bold and editorial—confident, slightly old-world, and energetic. Its slanted, high-contrast drawing brings a sense of motion and drama, while the flared serif treatment adds a classic, crafted finish rather than a purely modern sharpness.
The design appears intended to deliver a strong, attention-grabbing serif with a crafted, flared finish and a brisk italic momentum. Its wide stance, dark weight, and expressive terminals suggest a focus on impactful editorial and branding typography rather than quiet, utilitarian text setting.
In the sample text, the dark color and animated terminals create a strong typographic voice that holds together in dense lines, but the pronounced slant and contrast make it most compelling when given room to breathe. Numerals follow the same lively, wedge-terminal logic, keeping figures visually consistent with the letterforms.