Serif Normal Etret 1 is a regular weight, normal width, very high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: editorial, fashion, book jackets, invitations, headlines, elegant, literary, refined, luxury tone, italic emphasis, display elegance, editorial voice, didone, hairline, bracketed, calligraphic, high-waist.
A sharply contrasted italic serif with a pronounced rightward slant, crisp hairlines, and weighty vertical stems. Serifs are fine and tapered with subtle bracketing, and many joins resolve into needle-like terminals that accentuate the razor-thin thick–thin rhythm. The italic construction feels calligraphic yet controlled, with compact apertures, taut curves, and a slightly high-waisted modulation across rounds like C, O, and e. Uppercase forms are stately and narrow-to-moderate in proportion, while the lowercase shows lively, varied widths and pronounced italic entry/exit strokes.
Best suited to editorial settings such as magazine headlines, pull quotes, and refined display typography where its high contrast can be appreciated. It also fits luxury branding, invitations, and book or album covers that benefit from an elegant italic voice; for longer passages, it will perform most comfortably at larger sizes or in well-printed contexts that preserve its fine hairlines.
The overall tone is polished and upscale, with a dramatic, couture-like contrast that reads as sophisticated and intentional. It conveys a literary, classical sensibility while also feeling modern in its crispness and tension, making the page feel curated and expressive rather than neutral.
The design appears intended to deliver a classic, high-fashion italic serif with dramatic thick–thin contrast and a poised reading rhythm. Its emphasis on hairline finesse and controlled calligraphic movement suggests a focus on expressive display and premium typographic tone rather than utilitarian text neutrality.
In text, the strong diagonal stress and hairline details create a shimmering texture that rewards generous sizing and spacing. The figures follow the same high-contrast logic, with slender forms and delicate joins that keep numerals visually consistent with the letters.