Serif Normal Migut 14 is a bold, wide, high contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, editorial, book covers, posters, magazines, classic, authoritative, dramatic, literary, authority, editorial impact, classic readability, print presence, bracketed, beaked, ball terminals, vertical stress, crisp serifs.
A robust text serif with pronounced stroke modulation and crisp, bracketed serifs. The forms lean on a vertical stress and a sturdy, slightly condensed inner structure, with generous counters that keep heavy strokes from clogging. Serifs are sharp and often beaked, giving joins and terminals a sculpted, engraved feel. Lowercase shows a strong, rounded rhythm with prominent ball terminals (notably on letters like a and f), while capitals are compact and emphatic with clean, classical proportions. Numerals are weighty and old-style in feel, with curved joins and assertive terminals that match the letterforms.
Best suited to editorial design where a strong serif voice is needed—headlines, subheads, pull quotes, and cover typography. It can also serve for short-to-medium passages in print contexts that benefit from high contrast and decisive serifs, especially when a classic, authoritative tone is desired.
The overall tone is traditional and editorial, projecting authority and seriousness with a touch of theatrical contrast. Its strong silhouettes and sharp serifs evoke established print culture—book typography, newspapers, and institutional publishing—while the lively terminals add a confident, slightly dramatic voice.
This design appears intended to deliver a conventional text-serif structure with heightened contrast and emphatic detailing, balancing legibility with a bold, print-forward personality. The sharp serifs and ball terminals suggest a goal of adding character and authority without departing from familiar, readable proportions.
In the sample text, the dense color and firm serifs create a commanding headline presence, while the open counters and clear differentiation between similar shapes (such as I, l, and 1) help maintain readability. The spacing reads even and deliberate, supporting continuous text despite the heavy emphasis in strokes and terminals.