Serif Normal Furof 7 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: editorial, book covers, magazines, invitations, pull quotes, classic, formal, literary, refined, italic emphasis, classic voice, editorial tone, formal elegance, expressive contrast, bracketed, calligraphic, crisp, dynamic, sharp.
A high-contrast italic serif with crisp, tapered strokes and pronounced thick–thin modulation throughout. Serifs are bracketed and sharp, with lively entry/exit strokes that create a calligraphic, right-leaning rhythm. Counters tend to be compact and oval, while terminals often finish in pointed or beaked shapes, giving the forms a slightly energetic, engraved feel. Capitals are relatively narrow and upright-leaning with strong vertical emphasis, and the figures follow the same italic, high-contrast construction for a cohesive texture in mixed text.
Well-suited to editorial typography—magazines, book jackets, and cultured branding—where an expressive italic can carry headlines, subheads, or emphasized passages. It also fits formal applications like invitations and certificates, and performs strongly for pull quotes or short blocks of text set at comfortable sizes with generous leading.
The overall tone is refined and traditional, with an editorial sophistication that reads as literary and slightly dramatic. Its sharp contrasts and brisk italic movement suggest formality and authority rather than casual friendliness.
Designed to deliver a classic italic voice with pronounced contrast and a controlled, calligraphic flow, balancing readability with a sharpened, display-leaning elegance. The consistent italic treatment across the character set suggests an emphasis style intended to feel deliberate, polished, and traditional.
In text, the slanted stress and tight inner spaces produce a dense, elegant color, especially at larger sizes where the hairlines and pointed terminals become more expressive. The italic construction is consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals, supporting coherent emphasis within running copy.