Serif Flared Lova 7 is a very bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Bevenida' by Agny Hasya Studio (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, book covers, branding, packaging, editorial, victorian, theatrical, antique, whimsical, attention grabbing, vintage flavor, expressive display, dramatic contrast, ball terminals, bracketed serifs, flared strokes, soft joins, tight counters.
A heavy display serif with pronounced thick–thin modulation and subtly flared stroke endings that broaden into tapered, bracket-like terminals. Serifs are sharp yet softly joined, giving the outlines a carved, ink-trap-adjacent feel in places, while counters stay relatively compact at this weight. The shapes lean toward round, bulbous bowls (notably in O, Q, and lowercase e) paired with crisp interior cuts, creating a lively rhythm. Overall spacing reads slightly tight and the texture is dense, emphasizing bold word shapes over fine detail.
Best suited to large sizes where its contrast, tight counters, and flared terminals can read cleanly and add personality—such as posters, editorial headlines, book or album covers, and distinctive branding or packaging. In longer passages it works most convincingly for short bursts (pull quotes, section titles) where a dense, dramatic texture is desirable.
The font projects an antique, theatrical tone—part Victorian poster, part storybook headline—mixing authority with a playful twist. Its strong contrast and animated terminals add drama and a hint of whimsy, making it feel more performative than purely formal.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, attention-grabbing serif with historic flavor, using flared stroke endings and high contrast to evoke vintage print while keeping letterforms upright and assertive for modern display use.
Numerals share the same high-contrast, flared construction; figures like 2 and 3 show pronounced sweeping curves and sharp terminal cuts that heighten the display character. Uppercase forms are sturdy and monumental, while the lowercase introduces more bounce through rounded joins and prominent ball-like terminals on some letters, increasing the sense of motion in text settings.