Serif Other Nohe 2 is a very light, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, posters, book covers, invitations, elegant, whimsical, editorial, refined, theatrical, ornamental caps, luxury branding, display emphasis, editorial tone, hairline, didone-like, calligraphic, flourished, delicate.
A delicate, high-contrast serif with hairline connecting strokes and sharply tapered terminals, paired with small, crisp serifs. The uppercase features decorative internal swooshes and looped strokes that intersect or echo the main letterforms, creating a distinctive, ornamental construction without becoming fully script. Curves are clean and round, verticals are emphasized, and spacing feels open, giving the design a light, airy rhythm. Lowercase remains comparatively restrained and readable, with fine serifs and slender stems that maintain the same refined contrast as the capitals; numerals follow the same thin-and-thick modulation with elegant, simple silhouettes.
Best suited for display typography where the ornate capitals can be showcased: magazine and fashion headlines, boutique branding, packaging titles, event materials, and book or album covers. It can also work for short pull quotes or subheads when a refined, decorative serif voice is desired, with the lowercase supporting longer words more comfortably than the capitals.
The font conveys a poised, fashion-forward elegance with a playful, slightly baroque flourish. Its ornamented capitals add a sense of ceremony and drama, while the quieter lowercase keeps the overall tone polished and editorial rather than purely decorative. The result feels luxurious, boutique, and intentionally stylized.
The design appears intended to blend a modern high-contrast serif foundation with a signature set of ornamental capital gestures, offering a distinctive identity for titling and branding. The restrained lowercase suggests a goal of keeping usability in mind while reserving the most expressive flair for initials and headline settings.
The strongest personality comes from the uppercase, where consistent internal flourishes create a recognizable signature across A–Z. At smaller sizes the hairlines and internal strokes may visually soften, whereas at display sizes the contrast and ornamentation read as intentional detailing.