Serif Normal Obdat 11 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: book typography, editorial, magazines, headlines, invitations, formal, literary, refined, classic, classic text, space-saving, editorial tone, formal voice, typographic elegance, bracketed, hairline, crisp, vertical stress, oldstyle figures.
This serif presents crisp, high-contrast letterforms with thin hairlines and stronger vertical strokes, producing a bright, elegant texture. Serifs are finely bracketed and relatively sharp, with an overall vertical stress and carefully tapered terminals. Proportions skew narrow with a compact, short x-height, while capitals feel tall and stately; curves like C, G, and O are smoothly drawn and controlled. Numerals appear oldstyle (text figures) with ascenders and descenders, matching the mixed-case rhythm and reinforcing a bookish color on the page.
Well-suited to book typography and editorial layouts where a traditional serif voice is desired, particularly for headings, pull quotes, and elegant short-form text. It can also support formal communications such as invitations or programs, where its refined contrast and narrow fit help deliver a classic, upscale impression.
The tone is classic and cultivated, with a distinctly literary, editorial feel. Its high-contrast detailing reads as refined and traditional, lending a sense of formality and authority rather than casual warmth.
The design appears intended to deliver a conventional text-serif reading experience with elevated contrast and a compact footprint. By pairing tall capitals, a short x-height, and finely bracketed serifs, it aims to evoke traditional publishing aesthetics while maintaining a crisp, composed rhythm in setting.
In the text sample, the compact x-height and tight proportions create an economical line while keeping counters open enough for clarity at display and larger text sizes. The italic is not shown; all samples appear roman/upright. The ampersand and punctuation follow the same crisp, high-contrast logic, contributing to a consistent, polished typographic voice.