Serif Other Otmoj 2 is a very light, very narrow, high contrast, upright, very short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, invitations, book covers, branding, posters, elegant, whimsical, antique, delicate, poetic, ornamental display, vintage charm, refined flair, whimsy, hairline, calligraphic, spidery, flourished, lanky.
A hairline, high-contrast display serif with tall, narrow proportions and a noticeably small x-height. Strokes are extremely thin with occasional sharp, tapering terminals and small, crisp serifs, giving the letters a spidery, ink-drawn look. Several capitals and ascenders feature elongated verticals and subtle swash-like hooks (notably in forms like J, Q, and some lowercase ascenders), while rounds are kept light and open. Numerals are similarly refined and minimal, matching the font’s airy rhythm and delicate spacing.
Best suited for headlines and short phrases where its hairline contrast and elongated forms can be appreciated—such as invitations, boutique branding, theatrical posters, and literary or fantasy-themed covers. It can work as an accent face alongside a sturdier text companion, rather than as a primary body-text font.
The overall tone is refined yet eccentric—part formal invitation serif, part storybook flourish. Its thin lines and elongated forms feel fragile and theatrical, suggesting vintage charm and a slightly mysterious, whimsical elegance.
The letterforms appear designed to evoke an old-world, calligraphic sophistication while introducing decorative, slightly unconventional serif constructions for personality. The emphasis on tall verticals, fine strokes, and occasional flourishes suggests an intention to create a distinctive, ornamental display serif with a memorable silhouette.
The design leans strongly toward display use: small counters and extremely thin joins can visually recede at reduced sizes, while the tall ascenders and decorative touches create a distinctive texture in headline lines. Mixed-case text shows a pronounced contrast between towering ascenders/capitals and the very low lowercase body, which becomes a defining part of the font’s personality.