Serif Normal Ifkih 1 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: book covers, packaging, branding, editorial heads, quotes, storybook, whimsical, old-world, craft, friendly, add personality, evoke heritage, storybook tone, craft feel, decorative text, bracketed, calligraphic, flared, lively, idiosyncratic.
A lively serif with gently calligraphic construction and bracketed, slightly flared serifs. Strokes show modest contrast with softly tapered terminals and subtle wedge-like finishing, creating an organic rhythm rather than rigid geometry. Curves are generous and slightly irregular in a deliberate way, with distinctive, sometimes curled terminals (notably in letters like J, Q, R, and S). The overall texture is readable yet animated, with a compact footprint and letterforms that feel hand-shaped while remaining consistent across the set.
Well-suited to book covers, chapter openers, pull quotes, and editorial headlines where a traditional serif needs extra charm. It can also support branding and packaging for artisan, boutique, or heritage-leaning products, especially when a friendly, narrative feel is desired. For longer text, it works best at comfortable sizes where its ornamental terminals remain clear without becoming busy.
The font conveys a playful, storybook tone with an old-world, craft-made character. Its expressive terminals and subtly quirky details suggest warmth and personality rather than strict formality, lending a lightly theatrical, folklore-adjacent voice to headlines and short passages.
The design appears intended to blend conventional text-serif structure with handcrafted, expressive finishing. It aims for readability with added personality, using calligraphic tapering and distinctive terminals to create a memorable, story-driven voice.
The numerals echo the same ornamental, slightly calligraphic treatment, with rounded bowls and occasional curl-like details (especially in 2, 3, 6, and 9). In text, the lively terminals and tapered joins add sparkle, making the face feel more decorative than neutral while still staying within a classic serif idiom.