Serif Flared Ipram 2 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, magazines, branding, packaging, posters, fashion, editorial, luxurious, dramatic, refined, elegance, editorial tone, luxury branding, dramatic contrast, display impact, calligraphic, crisp, needlelike, elegant, sweeping.
A sharply slanted serif with pronounced thick–thin contrast and crisp, tapered terminals that flare subtly at stroke endings. The design shows a calligraphic rhythm: verticals and diagonals carry weight while hairlines stay extremely fine, creating a bright, sparkling texture in text. Capitals are tall and narrow with sculpted curves and pointed joins, and the lowercase maintains a steady x-height with long, angled ascenders/descenders that add momentum. Numerals follow the same contrasty logic, with slender spines and delicate curves that read best when given room.
Best suited for display applications where its contrast and italic sweep can be appreciated—fashion/editorial headlines, luxury branding, beauty or fragrance packaging, and high-end posters or invitations. It can work for short pull quotes or decks when set large with comfortable leading, but it’s less at home in small UI text or long-form reading at modest sizes.
The overall tone is upscale and expressive—polished like luxury branding, but with enough italic energy to feel dynamic and stylish. The high-contrast hairlines and sharp finishing strokes give it a dramatic, couture-forward voice suited to elegant, image-driven typography.
This font appears designed to deliver a sophisticated, modern-seriffed italic voice with strong calligraphic influence—prioritizing elegance, sharpness, and visual drama over utilitarian neutrality. The narrow proportions and flared, tapered endings aim to create a distinctive silhouette and a premium editorial feel.
In paragraph-sized settings the hairlines create a lively shimmer, while the strong slant and narrow letterforms produce a fast, forward-leaning cadence. It benefits from generous size and careful spacing so the finest strokes don’t visually collapse, especially in dense lines or low-contrast reproduction.