Serif Other Omra 4 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, book covers, film titles, branding, gothic, dramatic, mysterious, vintage, ornate, atmosphere, display impact, gothic styling, vintage voice, flared, spiky, calligraphic, crisp, angular.
A decorative serif with a very condensed set width and sharp, flared terminals that read like small wedges or horns at key stroke ends. Strokes show moderate contrast and a slightly calligraphic modulation, but the overall drawing stays crisp and controlled rather than brushy. Serifs are pointed and splayed instead of bracketed, giving many letters an engraved, blade-like finish. Curves are relatively tight and upright, with narrow counters and a compact rhythm in both capitals and lowercase.
Best suited to display settings such as headlines, posters, packaging, and title treatments where its narrow width and spiky serifs can create a strong silhouette. It can work well for book covers, music or film titling, and branding that wants a gothic or vintage edge. For longer text, it will be more effective in short bursts or larger sizes where the fine points and tight counters remain clear.
The font projects a gothic, slightly ominous tone with a theatrical, old-world flavor. Its spiked terminals and condensed stance create a sense of tension and drama, evoking dark fantasy, Victorian display, or occult-tinged branding without becoming fully blackletter.
The design appears intended to merge classical serif structure with aggressive, flared terminal detailing to create a condensed display face with strong character. It prioritizes a striking outline and atmospheric presence over neutrality, aiming for memorable word-shapes in titles and branding.
Uppercase forms feel formal and architectural, while the lowercase introduces more idiosyncratic shapes (notably in curved letters) that heighten the decorative personality. Numerals follow the same narrow, high-contrast logic and maintain the pointed finishing details, helping headings and short lines feel consistent across mixed copy.