Serif Normal Migor 2 is a bold, wide, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Charter BT' by Bitstream, 'Nena Serif' by DuoType, 'ITC Charter' by ITC, 'Nosta' by Protimient, and 'Leida' by The Northern Block (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, editorial, book covers, posters, branding, traditional, confident, formal, academic, impact, readability, authority, classic tone, bracketed, ball terminals, soft serifs, robust, ink-trap free.
A robust serif with pronounced thick–thin modulation and firmly bracketed serifs that create a classic, bookish silhouette. The strokes are weighty and the joins are smooth, with rounded transitions that keep counters open despite the heavy color. Terminals often finish with subtle ball-like shaping (notably in several lowercase forms), and the capitals show broad, steady proportions with a stable, vertical posture. Overall rhythm is even and authoritative, with clear letter separation and a strong typographic “color” in paragraphs.
Well suited to headlines and display settings where a classic serif voice and strong presence are desired, such as magazines, book covers, and promotional typography. It can also support short-form editorial text or pull quotes when a darker, more emphatic typographic color is appropriate.
The font conveys a traditional, editorial tone—confident and established rather than experimental. Its strong contrast and substantial presence feel suited to serious content, lending a sense of credibility and formality while remaining approachable through softened, rounded details.
The design appears intended to modernize conventional text-serif forms with heavier strokes and crisp contrast for impactful reading and editorial presence, balancing authority with slightly softened terminals for readability and warmth.
In sample text, the dense weight produces a dark, emphatic texture that reads as headline-forward, while still maintaining recognizable text-serif forms. Numerals appear sturdy and legible, matching the overall gravitas of the letters.