Serif Flared Nemam 7 is a bold, normal width, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, editorial, magazines, posters, branding, fashion, dramatic, luxury, classic, display impact, editorial voice, luxury tone, stylized classicism, sharp, sculptural, crisp, calligraphic, tapered.
A high-contrast serif with sculpted, flaring terminals and wedge-like serifs that give the strokes a carved, tapered feel. The verticals read firm and dark while hairlines stay extremely fine, creating a crisp light–dark rhythm. Curves are smooth but tightened by pointed joins and angled cuts, and many letters show subtly asymmetrical, calligraphic tension. The overall color is punchy and attention-grabbing, with compact counters in the heavier forms and a distinctly shaped, display-forward silhouette across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited for large-size typography such as magazine headlines, fashion and culture editorial layouts, posters, and brand wordmarks. It can work effectively for short subheads, pull quotes, and packaging fronts where contrast and sophistication are priorities. For long passages of text, it’s more appropriate in generous sizes and high-quality print or high-resolution display contexts.
The typeface conveys an editorial, fashion-oriented confidence—dramatic and refined rather than neutral. Its sharp tapers and gleaming hairlines suggest luxury and formality, while the flared endings add a slightly theatrical, poster-like presence. The tone feels classic but stylized, suited to statements and titles where elegance and impact are both desired.
The design appears intended to deliver a modern, high-impact serif voice with pronounced contrast and flared, chiseled terminals. It prioritizes visual drama, crispness, and distinctive letterform styling to stand out in display settings while retaining a recognizably classical serif framework.
Lowercase forms lean toward single-storey shapes in places and emphasize distinctive terminals, which increases personality over plain readability. Numerals and uppercase letters maintain the same high-contrast, wedge-terminal logic, helping headlines feel cohesive. At smaller sizes, the very thin hairlines and tight details may require careful sizing and reproduction to retain clarity.