Serif Flared Gaji 10 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'EFCO Osbert' by Ilham Herry, 'Belle Sans' by Park Street Studio, and 'Core Sans N' by S-Core (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, book covers, confident, classic, authoritative, editorial, vintage, strong display, traditional tone, readable heaviness, print presence, bracketed, ink-trap hints, wedge serifs, rounded joins, soft corners.
A very heavy serif with compact proportions and smoothly bracketed, wedge-like terminals that flare out from the stems. Strokes are largely even in weight, with rounded interior corners and a soft, slightly ink-trap-like shaping where heavy joins meet counters. The overall color is dense and steady, with sturdy verticals and broad, open curves; the numerals match the letters in mass and presence, and the lowercase keeps a straightforward, readable structure with a moderate x-height and short extenders.
Best suited for headlines, covers, and short blocks of text where a strong typographic voice is needed. It would work well for editorial titles, posters, packaging, and branding that benefits from a classic, weighty serif presence, and it can carry punchy pull quotes or signage where high impact is desired.
The font communicates confidence and authority with a distinctly traditional, print-forward tone. Its chunky serifs and softened shaping give it a familiar, slightly vintage feel—serious rather than delicate—suited to bold statements and institutional or editorial voice.
Likely designed to deliver a bold, traditional serif look with softened details that keep heavy strokes readable and visually controlled. The consistent flaring at terminals and sturdy proportions suggest an emphasis on impactful display typography that still retains familiar, bookish shapes.
Serifs and terminals show consistent flaring and gentle bracketing across the set, which helps large, dark letterforms avoid looking overly rigid. The wide, round counters in letters like O/C and the robust bowls in B/P/R contribute to strong legibility at display sizes, while the dense rhythm suggests it will dominate a page when set in paragraphs.