Serif Flared Mymak 3 is a very bold, normal width, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, editorial, posters, packaging, brand marks, dramatic, luxurious, classic, theatrical, attention, elegance, heritage, drama, display, flared, wedge serif, ball terminals, sculptural, sharp joints.
A sculptural serif with strong thick–thin modulation and distinctly flared, wedge-like terminals that feel carved rather than bracketed. Stems broaden into sharp, tapering serifs, while curves snap into crisp joints, creating a lively, chiseled rhythm. Counters are relatively compact in the heaviest strokes, with pronounced stroke contrast shaping letters like C, S, and G into bold, high-impact silhouettes. Lowercase forms show a traditional, two-storey a and g with tight apertures and prominent terminal shaping, and figures read as display-oriented, with assertive curves and clear weight concentration.
Best suited to display typography: magazine headlines, fashion and culture editorial, posters, event titling, and premium packaging. It can also work for logo wordmarks and short deck copy where the dramatic contrast and flared endings can be given room to breathe. For body copy, it will generally perform better at larger text sizes and with generous tracking and leading.
The overall tone is confident and theatrical, with a fashion/editorial polish that reads as premium and attention-grabbing. Its sharp flares and dramatic contrast evoke classic print elegance while still feeling contemporary in its intensity. The texture on the page is punchy and intentional, suited to headlines that want to feel authoritative and stylish.
The design appears intended to deliver high-impact elegance by combining classic serif proportions with pronounced flared terminals and razor-sharp contrast. It aims for a distinctive, sculpted presence that stands out in headline settings while maintaining recognizable, traditional letterforms.
In longer sample text the dense verticals and bright, tapered serifs create a strong black-and-white pattern that favors large sizes. The flared terminals and tight joins add personality, but can also make small-size settings feel busy, especially in sequences with many vertical strokes.