Sans Normal Tifa 11 is a regular weight, very wide, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, magazines, posters, branding, packaging, editorial, luxury, dramatic, classic, elegance, impact, editorial voice, premium branding, didone-like, refined, fashion, crisp, sculpted.
A sculpted, high-contrast roman with pronounced thick–thin transitions and crisp, hairline details. The letterforms show broad, confident verticals paired with delicate joining strokes and tapered terminals, creating a sharp, elegant rhythm. Curves are smooth and tightly controlled, with round forms like O and 0 reading as polished ovals, while diagonals (V, W, X) are clean and incisive. Proportions feel generously wide with steady spacing, and the overall texture alternates between bold stems and fine lines for a distinctly glossy, print-like presence.
Best suited to display settings where its contrast and sharp detailing can be appreciated: magazine headlines, large-format editorial typography, premium brand marks, and upscale packaging. It can work for short passages at comfortable sizes, but it visually excels when given room to breathe and printed or rendered at sizes that preserve its fine strokes.
The font conveys an upscale, editorial tone—formal, poised, and theatrical without feeling ornamental. Its contrast and sharp detailing suggest fashion, culture, and premium branding, giving text a sense of ceremony and importance.
Designed to project refinement through disciplined geometry and dramatic contrast, aiming for a contemporary take on classic high-fashion and editorial typography. The wide set and polished curves emphasize presence and elegance, making it ideal for attention-led, prestige-oriented design.
In longer sample text, the strong contrast creates a lively shimmer, with hairlines becoming a defining feature in punctuation, diagonals, and connecting strokes. Numerals match the style with similarly refined thin strokes and prominent main stems, lending a consistent, classical voice across letters and figures.