Serif Other Vume 3 is a bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, signage, packaging, logotypes, western, collegiate, vintage, authoritative, rugged, poster impact, retro signage, heritage tone, brand presence, decorative edge, chamfered, bracketed, notched, angular, compact.
A heavy, compact serif with pronounced angularity and chamfered corners throughout. Stems are thick and largely vertical, with crisp, bracket-like serifs that often end in small wedge or notched terminals, giving many letters a faceted, carved look. Counters tend toward squarish forms (notably in O/0 and rounded letters), while diagonals in V/W/X/Y are broad and sturdy, creating a strong rhythm in caps. Lowercase mixes sturdy, blocky structures with a few more traditional elements (e.g., two-storey a), maintaining a consistent, chiseled edge and tight internal spacing that reads best at display sizes.
This face is well suited to headlines, posters, event branding, and signage where a strong vintage or frontier tone is desired. It can also work for packaging labels, mastheads, and logo wordmarks that benefit from a bold, carved serif texture. For extended text, it will typically perform better in short bursts (titles, pull quotes, badges) than in small-size body copy.
The overall tone suggests old-style print and signage—confident, traditional, and slightly rugged. Its sharp corners and emphatic serifs evoke a Western/woodtype poster feel, while the uniform heaviness lends a bold, commanding presence suited to attention-grabbing headlines.
The design appears intended to modernize a classic display-serif/woodtype aesthetic by emphasizing faceted geometry, strong serifs, and compact proportions. Its consistent notched details and squared counters prioritize character and impact over neutrality, aiming for a distinctive, poster-ready voice.
The numerals share the same squared, octagonal geometry as the caps, with the 0 closely matching the letter O and the 1 presented as a simple vertical form. Across the set, terminals frequently resolve into small triangular cuts or stepped details, which reinforces the decorative, engraved character when set large.