Serif Normal Bonal 7 is a bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: editorial, headlines, book covers, magazines, branding, classic, bookish, trustworthy, warm, legibility, authority, warmth, print tone, emphasis, bracketed, rounded serifs, ball terminals, sturdy, readable.
A sturdy serif with generous proportions and softly bracketed serifs that flare into rounded, almost bulb-like terminals. Strokes are confidently thick with moderate contrast and smooth transitions, producing a dark, even typographic color. Curves are full and slightly squarish in places, counters are open, and joins are robust, giving the forms a calm, planted rhythm. The lowercase shows a compact, traditional construction with clear apertures and rounded finishing, while the numerals are weighty and stable for text and display use.
This design fits editorial settings where a strong serif voice is needed, such as magazine headlines, section openers, and book-cover typography. It also works for branding and packaging that wants a classic, established feel, and it can hold its own in short text passages when a darker, more emphatic texture is desired.
The overall tone is traditional and reassuring, with a slightly friendly softness from the rounded terminals and bracketing. It evokes familiar print typography—confident rather than delicate—well suited to conveying authority without feeling severe.
The font appears designed to deliver a classic serif reading experience with extra weight and warmth, prioritizing sturdiness, legibility, and a confident page color. The rounded, bracketed finishing suggests an intention to soften the formality of a traditional serif while preserving a conventional, text-oriented structure.
The heavy serifs and rounded ends create strong horizontal emphasis and help maintain clarity at larger sizes, while the dense stroke weight produces a pronounced presence in paragraphs. Letterforms stay conventional and highly legible, with few idiosyncrasies beyond the softened, ball-like finishing on many terminals.