Serif Other Haba 9 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: editorial, book titles, magazine display, posters, branding, classic, literary, quirky, whimsical, old-world, add character, vintage flavor, editorial presence, decorative serif, bracketed, flared, calligraphic, nervy, idiosyncratic.
This serif face pairs pronounced contrast with a slightly irregular, hand-influenced construction. Strokes transition sharply between hairline joins and heavier verticals, while terminals often flare into wedge-like shapes rather than ending mechanically. The serif treatment reads as bracketed and lively, with subtly varied stroke joins that give letters a gently uneven rhythm. Proportions are compact, with tall capitals, narrow bowls, and a relatively modest x-height; the overall color is crisp and dark, but never rigid.
It performs best where the distinctive serif shapes can be appreciated: headlines, book and chapter titles, magazine features, posters, and brand marks with a classic-but-unexpected voice. For longer passages it can work in carefully set text, especially in print-oriented layouts that benefit from its crisp contrast and energetic rhythm.
The tone feels bookish and vintage, with a playful eccentricity that keeps it from looking purely formal. Its high-contrast silhouette and expressive serifs evoke editorial and literary contexts, while the slightly quirky detailing adds character and charm.
The likely intent is to offer a traditional serif foundation with deliberately idiosyncratic detailing—bringing a literary, old-style feel while adding enough eccentric stroke and serif behavior to stand out in display settings.
The design maintains a consistent contrast model across caps, lowercase, and numerals, but allows noticeable personality in curves, hooks, and spur-like terminals. Numerals share the same sharp contrast and serifed structure, producing a cohesive, text-ready set with decorative edge.