Serif Normal Kibus 3 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: book text, editorial, magazines, long-form reading, academic, classic, literary, refined, formal, readability, tradition, elegance, authority, editorial tone, bracketed, sharp, crisp, stately, oldstyle.
A high-contrast serif with slender hairlines and stronger vertical stems, showing crisp, bracketed serifs and a clear diagonal stress in the rounded forms. The capitals feel stately and carefully proportioned, with generous interior counters (notably in C, O, and Q) and a clean, sculpted join behavior. Lowercase shapes read traditional and text-oriented, with a two-storey a, a looped g, and a delicately curved f; ascenders are tall and the overall rhythm is steady rather than condensed. Numerals follow the same refined contrast pattern, with clear, bookish forms and a slightly calligraphic finishing on terminals (especially visible in 2 and 9).
Well-suited to book typography and long-form editorial settings where a traditional serif voice is desired. It also fits academic and institutional materials, as well as magazine layouts that benefit from a refined, high-contrast texture.
The tone is classic and literary, projecting a polished, editorial seriousness typical of traditional book and magazine typography. Its sharp serifs and pronounced contrast add a sense of refinement and formality, while the familiar letterforms keep it approachable for extended reading.
The design appears intended as a conventional text serif that balances classic proportions with a more pronounced contrast and crisp detailing. Its goal is likely to provide a familiar, authoritative reading experience while adding a touch of elegance for editorial presentation.
In text, the face maintains a smooth, even color despite the contrast, with punctuation and capitals that feel well-matched to body copy rather than display-only. Curved letters show controlled modulation and tidy joins, contributing to a composed, authoritative texture on the page.