Serif Flared Moha 6 is a bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, editorial, book typography, branding, posters, classic, authoritative, formal, literary, readability, authority, heritage tone, print impact, editorial voice, bracketed, beaked, wedge, ball terminals, oldstyle figures.
A robust, high‑contrast serif with broad, sculpted strokes and pronounced bracketed serifs that often resolve into beaked and wedge-like endings. The design favors strong verticals and sharply tapered joins, producing crisp inner counters and a lively thick–thin rhythm. Lowercase shows traditional, text-oriented construction with a double-storey a and g, compact bowls, and frequent ball terminals (notably on c, f, and some descenders), while the capitals are wide-shouldered and emphatic with deep notches and flared entry/exit strokes. Numerals appear oldstyle with varying heights and distinctive curves, matching the font’s calligraphic modulation and sturdy color on the page.
It performs especially well in headlines, pull quotes, and editorial layouts where high contrast and strong serifs can create presence. The sturdy letterforms and traditional lowercase structure also suit book typography and longer passages at moderate sizes, while the distinctive numerals support display uses such as titling, packaging, and brand systems that want a classic, authoritative voice.
The overall tone is assertive and traditional, evoking book typography, heritage editorial design, and institutional gravitas. Its sharp modulation and sculpted serifs add a slightly dramatic, engraved feel that reads as confident and formal rather than delicate.
The design appears intended to combine traditional serif proportions with emphatic, sculpted stroke endings to create a confident, print-forward texture. By pairing strong modulation with expressive terminals and bracketed serifs, it aims to feel both classical and punchy in contemporary editorial and branding contexts.
Spacing appears comfortable for setting text, with a dense, dark typographic color and clear silhouette differentiation across letters. The italic is not shown; the presented style relies on upright, strongly modeled forms where terminals and serifs carry much of the character.