Serif Other Naja 7 is a light, very wide, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, editorial, fashion, posters, magazines, dramatic, elegant, theatrical, distinctive display, editorial elegance, calligraphic flair, flared, calligraphic, wedge serif, sharp terminals, display.
A high-contrast serif with flared, wedge-like terminals and a distinctly calligraphic stroke logic. Curves show pronounced thick–thin modulation, with hairline connections and heavier bellies that create a lively, sculpted rhythm. The serifs are not bracketed in a traditional way; instead they feel like tapered blades that extend and curl subtly, giving many letters a spurred, ornamental finish. Counters are relatively open despite the strong modulation, and the overall drawing favors sweeping curves and crisp points over flat, mechanical joins.
Best suited to display settings such as magazine headlines, fashion and culture branding, posters, and pull quotes where the contrast and flared terminals can be appreciated. It can work for short passages at larger sizes, but the lively stroke modulation and sharp details will be most effective when given room and scale.
The font reads as elegant and dramatic, with a couture/editorial sensibility. Its sharp, flaring terminals and theatrical contrast convey sophistication with a slightly mischievous, decorative edge—more “headline and poster” than “quiet text.”
The design appears intended to reinterpret classic serif proportions through a more decorative, calligraphy-informed construction, emphasizing dramatic contrast and distinctive wedge terminals for a memorable display voice.
In text, the animated terminals and contrast create a sparkling texture, especially around S/C/G-like forms and diagonals, where pointed ends become a key stylistic signature. Numerals follow the same flared, high-contrast vocabulary, with curved figures (notably 3/5/8/9) emphasizing the font’s swooping, ornamental motion.