Serif Normal Nyraz 11 is a bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: editorial, book text, headlines, magazines, institutional, traditional, authoritative, literary, formal, classic readability, editorial voice, print authority, strong presence, bracketed, wedge serifs, ball terminals, vertical stress, sturdy.
A robust serif with pronounced contrast between thick verticals and finer connecting strokes, built around a steady, upright axis. Serifs are clearly bracketed with a slightly wedge-like finish, giving strokes a carved, print-oriented feel. Uppercase forms are wide and weighty with strong vertical emphasis, while lowercase shows compact, readable shapes with distinct ball terminals (notably on forms like a and y) and a two-storey a. Counters are moderately open and the overall color is dark and even, suited to setting dense text without looking spindly.
It performs well in editorial settings such as magazines, reports, and book typography, particularly for headings, subheads, and pull quotes where a strong typographic color is desirable. In longer passages it can lend a classic, formal voice, especially in print-oriented layouts that benefit from high-contrast serif detail.
The font projects a traditional, bookish tone with a confident, institutional voice. Its weight and crisp serif detailing feel established and serious, evoking classic editorial typography and formal print materials.
The design appears intended to deliver a conventional, print-classic serif with extra presence—balancing traditional proportions and bracketed serifs with enough weight to hold up in prominent text settings. It aims for familiar readability while adding authority and a distinctly editorial texture.
Figures appear oldstyle-influenced in proportion, with varied widths and strong alignment to the baseline; the 0 is oval and the 1 is a simple vertical with a small top treatment. The overall rhythm is steady and slightly compact, with clear differentiation between similar glyphs and a consistent serif vocabulary across cases.