Serif Flared Webur 2 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: book titling, editorial, posters, headlines, certificates, classic, literary, formal, refined, space saving, traditional tone, headline impact, engraved feel, flared serifs, condensed, high-waist, bracketed feel, pointed terminals.
A condensed serif with tapered, flared stroke endings and a crisp, chiseled silhouette. Stems often broaden into wedge-like feet and heads, creating a subtle “engraved” effect without heavy bracketing. The design shows moderate stroke modulation, tight sidebearings, and a strongly vertical rhythm, with narrow bowls and compact counters that keep the texture dense and columnar. Uppercase forms are tall and stately, while lowercase maintains a straightforward structure with compact apertures and clearly defined serifed terminals; numerals follow the same narrow, vertical proportions for consistent color in mixed text.
Well suited to headlines, book and magazine titling, and editorial pull quotes where a narrow measure and a strong vertical presence are desirable. It can also support formal materials such as programs, invitations, and certificate-style designs that benefit from a traditional serif voice with added sharpness.
The overall tone reads classical and bookish, with an old-style gravitas and a slightly dramatic, poster-like sharpness. Its tight, upright cadence feels ceremonial and authoritative, suggesting tradition, publishing, and institutional contexts rather than casual or playful uses.
Likely designed to deliver a traditional serif impression in a space-saving, condensed format, using flared stroke endings to add distinction and a crafted, engraved-like finish. The consistent narrow proportions across letters and figures suggest an emphasis on strong typographic color and commanding headline presence.
The flared endings add character at display sizes, where the wedge terminals and narrow internal spaces become a defining motif. In longer settings the condensed proportions produce a dark, continuous text color, emphasizing verticality and economy of space.