Serif Flared Fifa 11 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: book typography, editorial, headlines, branding, packaging, classic, dignified, literary, authoritative, readability, authority, heritage, warmth, versatility, bracketed, flared serifs, ball terminals, teardrop terminals, calligraphic.
A robust serif with subtly flared, bracketed serifs and smooth, gently swelling joins that give the strokes a carved, calligraphic feel. The letterforms show rounded bowls and softened corners, with frequent teardrop and ball-like terminals (notably in the lowercase and some numerals) that add warmth to the heavy texture. Curves are full and stable, counters are moderately open, and the overall rhythm is steady with slightly variable character widths that keep text color lively without becoming irregular. Numerals share the same sculpted, flared finishing and feel integrated with the alphabet.
Well suited to editorial design, book typography, and magazine settings where a confident, traditional serif texture is desired. The strong silhouettes and distinctive terminals also make it effective for headlines, display lines, and brand identities that want an established, premium feel without the sharpness of high-contrast modern serifs.
The font conveys a traditional, bookish confidence—serious and established, but not austere. Its flared finishing and rounded terminals introduce a human, slightly historic tone that reads as refined and trustworthy in longer settings while still feeling display-capable at larger sizes.
The design appears intended to blend classic serif structure with flared, calligraphic finishing to achieve both authority and warmth. It prioritizes a strong text color and recognizable shapes, aiming for versatility across reading sizes and prominent typographic moments.
Diagonal strokes and arms end in tapered, serifed finishes that create a subtle sense of motion, while the heavier joins and rounded forms maintain a strong, even presence. The uppercase has a stately, inscriptional character, and the lowercase brings softer, more personable details through its terminals and bowl shapes.