Serif Normal Morad 2 is a bold, normal width, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Silvana' by Blaze Type and 'Empira' by Hoftype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, editorial, posters, book covers, branding, classic, dramatic, formal, elegant, editorial impact, classical refinement, display emphasis, authoritative tone, bracketed, wedge serifs, ball terminals, sharp apexes, compact spacing.
A high-contrast serif with strongly bracketed, wedge-like serifs and crisp, sharpened joins. Strokes shift quickly from hairline-thin to heavy, producing a carved, chiseled rhythm, especially in diagonals and curved bowls. Capitals are sturdy and slightly condensed in feel, with pointed apexes on A/V/W and a pronounced diagonal leg on R. Lowercase shows a traditional construction with a two-storey a, a looped g, and ball terminals on letters like f and j; the overall spacing reads compact and assertive in text.
Best suited to headlines, deck text, and other short-form settings where its strong contrast and compact rhythm create immediate presence. It can work for editorial applications such as magazine features, book covers, and refined branding, particularly when used at sizes that preserve the delicacy of the hairlines and the clarity of the counters.
The font projects a confident, editorial tone—polished and formal with a theatrical edge created by the extreme thick–thin contrast and sharp serif geometry. It feels rooted in classical book typography while leaning toward display use because of its punchy, high-impact texture.
The design appears intended to deliver a conventional serif reading model with heightened contrast and sharpened details for stronger display impact. Its proportions and familiar lowercase forms support legibility, while the dramatic stroke modulation and wedge serifs add authority and visual tension.
In the sample text, the dense color and tight internal counters make it especially striking at larger sizes, where the hairlines and bracketed serifs can be appreciated without crowding. Numerals follow the same contrasty, serifed logic, reinforcing a cohesive, traditional typographic voice.