Serif Flared Idla 14 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, posters, sportswear, magazines, sleek, retro, assertive, sporty, editorial, dynamic display, modern classic, brand voice, editorial impact, speed cue, flared, angular, oblique, taut, crisp.
A sharply slanted serif with flared stroke endings and a taut, streamlined construction. Curves are clean and slightly squared off in places, while terminals and joins resolve into wedge-like, expanding finishes that read as refined rather than heavy. The overall rhythm is forward-leaning and kinetic, with open counters, firm horizontals, and compact, stylized forms that stay consistent across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
This design is well suited to headlines, subheads, and short paragraphs where its slanted, flared detailing can carry personality without becoming ornate. It can work effectively for branding, packaging, and poster work that benefits from a sleek, energetic voice, and it also fits editorial display roles such as magazine titles and feature openers.
The tone feels energetic and modern with a hint of vintage display flavor—confident, fast, and slightly dramatic. Its italic stance and crisp flaring give it a sense of motion and polish, suggesting speed, performance, and headline-driven clarity rather than quiet text neutrality.
The font appears intended to blend serif credibility with a streamlined, performance-oriented aesthetic. By using low-contrast strokes and flared endings within an italic, wide-leaning structure, it aims to deliver a distinctive, contemporary display presence while remaining orderly and readable in typical headline sizes.
The sample text shows strong word-shape and a distinctive silhouette driven by the pronounced slant and flared finishing, especially in letters with long strokes and diagonals. Numerals appear clean and structured, matching the same angled logic and terminal behavior as the letters.