Serif Flared Faha 10 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, editorial, book covers, branding, posters, classic, bookish, authoritative, warm, traditional, credibility, readability, heritage, expressiveness, editorial tone, bracketed, teardrop terminals, calligraphic, softened, high-ink.
A sturdy serif with pronounced flaring at stroke ends and strongly bracketed, wedge-like serifs that give stems a carved, ink-rich look. Curves are full and slightly squarish in places, with a rhythmic alternation between straight, confident verticals and rounded bowls. Terminals often finish in tapered, teardrop-like forms, and joins feel softly modeled rather than sharply mechanical. Proportions lean classic: capitals are broad and stately, lowercase is compact with clear counters, and numerals are robust and legible with traditional serifed forms.
Well-suited for headlines and subheads where a classic, authoritative serif voice is desired, and it also performs convincingly in editorial settings for pull quotes or short paragraphs. Its distinctive flared details make it a strong choice for book covers, cultural branding, and poster typography where a traditional yet expressive texture is beneficial.
The overall tone is traditional and confident, with a literary, editorial voice. The flared strokes and softened bracketing add warmth and a slightly old-world, crafted character, while the bold presence keeps it assertive and attention-holding.
The design appears intended to combine classic serif readability with a more sculpted, flared-stroke personality. It aims to evoke tradition and credibility while adding warmth through tapered terminals and bracketed serifs that create a lively, crafted texture.
Text samples show strong word-shape and steady spacing that supports continuous reading at display-to-text sizes, with especially weighty verticals and generous bowls in letters like O, Q, and g. The design’s distinctive personality comes from its flared endings and tapered terminals, which create a subtly calligraphic texture across lines.