Serif Normal Kumor 2 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: books, editorial, body text, academic, reports, classic, literary, formal, scholarly, trustworthy, readability, traditional tone, editorial utility, typographic neutrality, bracketed, crisp, balanced, calligraphic, bookish.
A traditional serif with bracketed serifs, moderate stroke contrast, and a steady, readable rhythm. The letterforms show gently sculpted transitions and slightly tapered terminals, giving the face a refined, print-oriented texture rather than a blunt or geometric feel. Capitals are stately and evenly proportioned, while the lowercase maintains clear differentiation and consistent spacing, producing a calm, continuous color in paragraph settings. Numerals appear lining and proportioned to sit comfortably alongside capitals and text without calling attention to themselves.
Well suited to long-form reading in books, essays, and editorial layouts, where its even spacing and measured contrast support comfortable line-to-line flow. It also fits academic and institutional materials, reports, and other contexts that benefit from a formal, trustworthy voice, with enough presence to handle section headings and pull quotes.
The overall tone is classic and composed, with a distinctly literary, editorial character. It suggests established authority and clarity—appropriate for content meant to feel credible and considered rather than trendy or expressive.
The design appears intended as a dependable, general-purpose text serif that prioritizes familiarity and readability. Its moderate contrast and bracketed construction aim for a polished, print-classical feel that works across paragraphs and headlines without stylistic extremes.
Details such as the bracketed serifs, moderated contrast, and clean counters create a familiar reading experience at text sizes, while the crisp joins and controlled curves help it hold up for headings without becoming overly ornate. The design reads as conventional in the best sense: restrained, legible, and typographically orthodox.