Serif Normal Ohkad 5 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'FF Marselis Serif' by FontFont; 'Prumo Banner' and 'Ysobel' by Monotype; 'Core Serif N' by S-Core; and 'Abril', 'Abril Titling', and 'Portada' by TypeTogether (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: body text, editorial, books, magazines, academic, classic, authoritative, literary, institutional, readability, tradition, text color, editorial voice, stability, bracketed serifs, oldstyle numerals, large x-height, robust, bookish.
A robust serif with bracketed serifs and rounded terminals that keep the texture dense and even in paragraphs. Strokes show noticeable modulation without becoming delicate, and the curves are full and slightly softened, giving counters a sturdy, open feel. Proportions lean traditional, with moderate letterfit and a calm rhythm; the lowercase has a generous x-height and compact extenders, supporting strong readability. Numerals appear oldstyle (text figures), reinforcing a book-oriented, continuous reading texture.
Well-suited to long-form body text in print and screen settings where a strong serif texture and steady rhythm are desirable. It can also serve editorial headlines and subheads when a classic, established voice is needed, pairing naturally with traditional layouts and content-heavy pages.
The overall tone is traditional and confident, with a familiar, bookish presence that feels established rather than trendy. Its heavy, rounded detailing conveys warmth and solidity, lending an authoritative voice suited to formal and editorial contexts.
The design appears intended as a dependable, conventional text serif: sturdy enough to hold up in dense paragraphs, with softened details for comfortable reading and a classic typographic voice that integrates easily into editorial and publishing workflows.
The caps feel weighty and stable, with clear, conventional forms and gentle bracketing at the serifs that prevents sharpness. The lowercase maintains a consistent color across lines, and the punctuation and symbols shown sit comfortably at text sizes without drawing undue attention.