Serif Flared Typi 6 is a very bold, narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, book covers, event titles, playful, folkloric, whimsical, rustic, spooky, expressive display, handcrafted feel, vintage flavor, thematic titling, flared terminals, chiseled, irregular, bouncy, high-impact.
A heavy, compact display serif with flared, wedge-like terminals and subtly uneven contours that suggest hand-cut or brush-ink origins. Strokes are broadly consistent in thickness with minimal internal contrast, while corners and joins often taper into sharp points or small notches. Proportions are generally narrow with a lively, slightly wobbly rhythm; bowls are rounded but somewhat pinched, and many letters show asymmetric shaping that keeps the texture animated. Numerals follow the same blunt, faceted logic, maintaining strong color and clear silhouettes at larger sizes.
Best suited to display settings where personality is the priority: posters, headlines, titles, packaging, and cover typography. It can work well for themed materials—folklore, fantasy, seasonal or Halloween-adjacent promotions—where a handcrafted, slightly wild texture is desirable. For longer passages, it will be most comfortable at larger sizes and with generous spacing.
The overall tone is theatrical and mischievous, balancing a storybook charm with a faintly spooky, vintage-poster edge. Its irregularity reads as intentional and handcrafted, giving text a spirited, characterful voice rather than a strictly formal one.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, compact headline voice with a handcrafted, flared-serif signature. Its controlled weight and upright stance support legibility, while the irregular terminals and chiseled details inject character for expressive branding and titling.
The most distinctive cue is the repeated flaring at stroke endings, producing a carved, calligraphic bite without becoming a full blackletter. In sentences, the tight width and strong weight create dense, attention-grabbing word shapes, while the uneven terminals add movement across lines.