Serif Normal Ulboh 11 is a very light, normal width, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, magazines, branding, posters, packaging, editorial, fashion, luxury, refined, dramatic, elegance, editorial impact, premium branding, display refinement, hairline, crisp, delicate, elegant, sharp.
A delicate serif with razor-thin hairlines and emphatic vertical stress, creating a distinctly calligraphic, high-contrast rhythm. Serifs are fine and sharp, with tapered joins and clean, controlled curves that keep counters open while maintaining a narrow, poised stance in many letters. Capitals feel stately and sculpted, while the lowercase combines compact bowls with slender stems and subtle modulation that reads smooth in continuous text. Numerals follow the same refined contrast, with graceful curves and thin entry/exit strokes that emphasize a polished, display-minded finish.
Best suited to display typography such as magazine headlines, mastheads, fashion and beauty branding, premium packaging, and large-scale posters. It can work for short editorial passages and pull quotes when set with generous leading and careful tracking, but its finest details will be most reliable where reproduction is clean and sizes are not too small.
The overall tone is sophisticated and editorial, with a runway-like glamour and a composed, premium feel. Its dramatic contrast and hairline detailing suggest formality and precision rather than warmth or rustic texture, projecting an image-conscious, upscale voice.
The design appears intended to deliver an elegant, high-fashion serif voice with a strong vertical cadence and dramatic thick–thin contrast. Its controlled shapes and sharp finishing aim for a luxurious, curated presence that elevates titles and brand statements.
In longer settings the thin horizontals and hairlines become defining features, so spacing and line height play a strong role in maintaining clarity. The design’s crisp terminals and pronounced thick–thin transitions make it especially striking at larger sizes, where the subtle shaping of curves and serifs becomes more apparent.