Serif Normal Penut 2 is a regular weight, normal width, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, editorial, magazines, branding, packaging, luxury, refined, dramatic, fashion, elegance, premium tone, editorial impact, classic revival, high-contrast, calligraphic, crisp, sharp, sculpted.
A high-contrast serif with thin hairlines and pronounced, swelling main strokes that create a crisp, editorial rhythm. Serifs are sharp and finely tapered, with a slightly calligraphic feel in joins and terminals rather than purely mechanical construction. Capitals show elegant, sculpted proportions (notably in C, G, S, and Q) with clean curves and narrow hairline connections. Lowercase forms are compact and steady, with bracketed, pointed finishing strokes and teardrop-like details on several terminals; numerals follow the same dramatic thick–thin logic, with a delicate, open “4” and curving “2/3/5” forms.
Best suited for headlines, decks, pull quotes, and magazine-style editorial typography where contrast and sophistication are desirable. It can work for short-to-medium passages in high-quality print or carefully tuned digital layouts, and it’s a strong option for luxury branding, beauty/fashion packaging, and upscale identity systems.
The overall tone is polished and upscale, balancing classic bookish authority with a fashionable, display-driven drama. Its sharp hairlines and refined curves read as premium and intentional, suited to contexts where elegance and contrast are part of the message.
The design appears intended to deliver a contemporary interpretation of classic high-contrast serif typography: glamorous, legible at display sizes, and visually distinctive through sharp serifs, tight hairlines, and sculpted curves.
In text settings, the strong vertical stress and hairline serifs create a lively sparkle and clear hierarchy, especially in mixed-case. The design’s delicacy suggests it benefits from adequate size and comfortable line spacing, as the thinnest strokes become a key part of its character.