Serif Normal Wanuh 10 is a very light, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: editorial, books, magazines, headlines, invitations, elegant, refined, literary, airy, classical, elegance, editorial tone, classic refinement, luxury feel, display clarity, hairline, delicate, crisp, graceful, bracketed.
This typeface is a delicate, high-contrast serif with pronounced hairline horizontals and sharper, weighty vertical stems. Serifs are finely bracketed and tapered, giving joins a smooth, calligraphic transition rather than a mechanical slab feel. Uppercase forms are stately and slightly narrow in impression, with generous internal counters and a crisp, controlled rhythm. Lowercase shows classic text proportions with a modest x-height, thin connecting strokes, and softly shaped terminals that keep the texture open and light. Numerals follow the same refined contrast, reading cleanly at display sizes with elegant curves and thin cross-strokes.
It works especially well for editorial typography—magazine features, book interiors with generous leading, and refined headlines where the high contrast can shine. It also suits formal printed pieces such as invitations, programs, and luxury branding applications where an elegant serif voice is desired.
The overall tone is sophisticated and literary, with a quiet luxury that reads as editorial and cultured rather than bold or utilitarian. Its airy contrast and fine details suggest formality and careful typesetting, suited to brands and publications that want restraint and polish.
The design appears intended to provide a traditional, high-contrast serif voice with contemporary cleanliness—prioritizing elegance, crispness, and an upscale reading experience in both display and carefully set text.
The stroke contrast is strong enough that spacing and line breaks feel important for best results; in the sample setting it creates a bright page color with a distinctly classic, bookish cadence. Curved letters show smooth, continuous modulation, and the thin horizontals (like in E, F, and T) contribute to a sharp, precise sparkle in text.