Serif Flared Emho 14 is a regular weight, wide, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: magazines, book covers, headlines, branding, posters, editorial, elegant, confident, literary, classic, editorial voice, premium tone, classic revival, display impact, refined texture, bracketed, sculpted, calligraphic, open counters, crisp.
This serif presents sculpted, flaring terminals and bracketed serifs that give strokes a subtly chiseled, calligraphic finish. Contrast is pronounced, with fine hairlines and stronger main stems that create a crisp rhythm in text and display. The proportions read slightly expansive, with generous letter widths and open internal spaces that help forms stay clear at larger sizes. Curves are smooth and controlled, and joins feel carefully modeled rather than purely geometric, producing an overall refined, print-oriented texture.
Well-suited to editorial design—magazine spreads, book covers, and feature headlines—where its contrast and sculpted terminals can be appreciated. It also fits premium branding and poster-style typography that benefits from classic serif cues with a slightly more expressive finish. In longer text, it will read best when given comfortable size and spacing so the hairlines and flared details remain crisp.
The tone is polished and literary, pairing traditional serif authority with a more expressive, crafted edge from the flared stroke endings. It feels confident and elevated without becoming overly ornate, lending a composed, editorial voice to headlines and short passages.
The design appears intended to modernize a classic serif model by emphasizing modeled, flaring terminals and crisp contrast, delivering a distinctive page color for contemporary editorial and brand work. It aims to balance tradition and personality: formal enough for literary contexts, yet expressive enough to stand out in display settings.
Capital forms appear stately and stable, while the lowercase maintains a steady, readable texture with distinct serifs and clear differentiation between similar shapes. Numerals are sturdy and high-contrast, matching the serif detailing and maintaining a formal, editorial demeanor in mixed typography.