Serif Normal Jomul 3 is a bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: book text, editorial, magazines, headlines, academic, authoritative, traditional, literary, formal, readability, authority, tradition, print text, editorial voice, bracketed, oldstyle, calligraphic, sturdy, classic.
A robust serif with strong thick–thin modulation and clearly bracketed serifs that soften the joins into the stems. Proportions feel moderately wide with a steady, text-oriented rhythm; round letters are full and weighty, while diagonals (V, W, X) retain crisp edges without looking brittle. The lowercase shows a two-storey a and g with compact bowls and a relatively small aperture, plus a pronounced ear on g; punctuation-like terminals and serifs are rounded rather than razor-sharp, giving the face a durable, print-friendly texture. Numerals are sturdy and fairly traditional in construction, matching the overall color and contrast of the letters.
Well suited to long-form reading in books and editorial layouts where a traditional serif voice is desired, and it can also carry display roles such as chapter titles, headlines, pull quotes, and formal announcements. The sturdy weight and pronounced contrast help it hold up in print-oriented compositions and high-impact typographic hierarchies.
The font communicates a classic, bookish authority with a distinctly editorial tone. Its high-contrast strokes and softened, bracketed serifs suggest formality and credibility rather than minimalism, evoking established publishing and institutional typography.
The design appears intended as a conventional, high-contrast text serif that balances refinement with firmness, delivering a dependable page color and familiar letterforms for comfortable, authoritative typography.
The texture in text sizes reads dense and confident, with comparatively tight internal counters on several lowercase forms, which contributes to a darker page color. Capitals present a clear, conventional structure suited to headings, while the lowercase maintains a strong baseline presence and consistent serif treatment across the set.