Serif Normal Komoj 3 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: books, editorial, magazines, headlines, branding, classic, literary, formal, refined, authoritative, text reading, editorial tone, classic styling, formal voice, bracketed serifs, transitional feel, crisp joins, sharp terminals, ball terminals.
A crisp serif with pronounced thick–thin modulation and finely bracketed serifs. The letterforms show a relatively vertical stress with clean, confident curves and sharp, tapered terminals. Proportions feel moderately condensed in capitals with ample counters, while lowercase maintains steady rhythm and clear differentiation between stems and hairlines. Details like the two-storey a and g, compact ear/terminal treatments, and strong numerals give it a structured, editorial texture at text sizes and a polished look when enlarged.
Well-suited to long-form reading contexts such as books, journals, and editorial layouts, where its contrast and bracketed serifs create an elegant text texture. It also performs effectively for headlines, pull quotes, and institutional or heritage-leaning branding where a traditional, authoritative voice is desired.
The overall tone is traditional and composed, projecting a bookish, institutional confidence. Its high-contrast strokes and crisp finishing convey refinement and seriousness, while the steady spacing keeps it readable and disciplined rather than decorative.
Designed to deliver a conventional, high-contrast serif voice with a refined, print-classical character. The emphasis appears to be on clear text rhythm and polished display presence, balancing elegance with everyday readability.
Uppercase forms lean toward classical Roman construction with sturdy verticals and controlled curves; the italic is not shown, and all samples appear roman. The figures read as lining-style in appearance, with clear, sturdy forms that match the capital height and contrast pattern. The sample text demonstrates strong word-shape consistency and a distinctly print-oriented color on the page.