Serif Normal Tysu 2 is a light, normal width, very high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: editorial, fashion, magazines, luxury branding, book titles, elegant, fashion-forward, literary, dramatic, refined, editorial elegance, luxury tone, italic emphasis, display refinement, calligraphic flavor, hairline serifs, calligraphic, tapered strokes, bracketed serifs, crisp joins.
A sharply slanted serif with a pronounced calligraphic axis and extreme thick–thin modulation. The letterforms use hairline, bracketed serifs and tapered terminals that often finish in pointed, blade-like ends. Curves are drawn with a smooth, polished tension, while vertical strokes carry the visual weight and the connecting strokes drop to very fine hairlines. Proportions feel classical with moderate ascenders/descenders, and spacing appears relatively tight, producing a quick, lively rhythm in text.
This style performs best in editorial environments—magazine typography, headlines, and pull quotes—where its contrast and slant can be appreciated. It also suits luxury-oriented branding, invitations, and book or chapter titles that benefit from a refined, high-fashion voice. For extended body text, it will generally be most comfortable at larger sizes or in high-quality print and high-resolution digital settings.
The overall tone is elegant and dramatic, with a couture-like sheen that reads refined and editorial. Its high-contrast sparkle and confident slant give it a sophisticated, slightly theatrical presence suitable for elevated, taste-driven design.
The design appears intended to deliver a modern, high-contrast italic with a distinctly calligraphic sensibility—prioritizing elegance, sparkle, and motion. It aims to evoke classical serif sophistication while pushing drama through razor-thin hairlines and emphatic stroke weight.
The italic construction is strongly expressive: many forms lean into sweeping entry/exit strokes, and the numerals follow the same high-contrast, tapered logic for a cohesive texture. At smaller sizes the finest hairlines may visually recede, while at display sizes the sharp terminals and contrast become a defining feature.