Serif Other Erwu 2 is a bold, wide, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, signage, logos, stenciled, industrial, military, rugged, vintage, stencil effect, high impact, vintage texture, industrial tone, display emphasis, ink trap, notched, weathered, display, high-contrast.
A high-contrast serif display face with a pronounced stencil construction: many strokes are interrupted by sharp notches and triangular cut-ins that create a broken, segmented silhouette. The letterforms are wide and heavy, with compact interior counters and crisp, angular terminals that read like chiseled or cut metal rather than penned curves. Serifs are present but often simplified into wedge-like projections, and curves (notably in O/C/G and numerals) are built from bold arcs with conspicuous internal breaks. Overall spacing and widths vary by character, giving the texture an uneven, poster-like rhythm while remaining visually consistent in its repeated cutout motif.
Best suited to large-scale display use such as posters, headlines, labels/packaging, and logo wordmarks where the stencil cuts can be appreciated. It can also work for themed signage and short, punchy editorial callouts, but is less appropriate for long-form reading or small UI text.
The font conveys a tough, utilitarian tone with a vintage, stenciled feel—suggesting labeling, equipment markings, and distressed print. Its dramatic contrast and broken strokes add urgency and grit, leaning toward a bold, authoritative voice rather than refined elegance.
The design appears intended to merge a traditional serif skeleton with a deliberate stencil/cutout system, prioritizing impact and texture over neutral legibility. The consistent notching and angular breaks suggest a concept built around industrial marking and distressed printing aesthetics.
In text settings the frequent internal breaks can visually close counters and reduce clarity at smaller sizes; the design reads best when the stencil gaps remain clearly visible. Numerals and capitals carry especially strong signage character, and the overall texture becomes darker and more compact as lines of text stack.