Serif Normal Onmy 7 is a bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Acreva' by Andfonts, 'Ysobel' by Monotype, 'Felice' by Nootype, 'Selina' by ParaType, 'Captione' by Zafara Studios, and 'Evans' by Zetafonts (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, editorial, packaging, posters, book covers, traditional, authoritative, classic, bookish, readability, authority, heritage tone, display impact, bracketed, beaked, rounded terminals, teardrop terminals, lively rhythm.
A sturdy serif with pronounced bracketed serifs and a softly sculpted, calligraphic modulation. Strokes swell and taper with clear thick–thin contrast, and many joins are rounded, giving counters a slightly inflated, inked feel. Terminals often finish in beak-like or teardrop shapes, and the overall drawing favors compact, solid forms with a confident presence. Proportions are conventional for text, with stable capitals and lowercase shapes that keep a steady, readable rhythm.
This design suits editorial headlines and subheads, book and magazine work, and branded materials that need a traditional serif voice with strong impact. It can also work well for packaging and poster typography where a classic, emphatic texture is desirable.
The font projects a classic, editorial tone—confident and slightly old-style—balancing formality with a warm, human touch. Its bold color and shaped terminals suggest tradition and authority while still feeling personable rather than austere.
The design appears intended to deliver a conventional serif look with extra weight and expressive, ink-like finishing, creating a dependable text-seriffed foundation that also holds up as a display face. Its shaped terminals and bracketed serifs aim to add warmth and character without departing from familiar, readable proportions.
Numerals are weighty and clear, matching the type’s dense texture and rounded detailing, which helps maintain consistency between headings and running text. The sample paragraph shows strong word shapes and a dark typographic color that reads as deliberate and emphatic at display and short-text sizes.