Serif Normal Nimad 6 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, signage, logos, packaging, western, poster, rugged, retro, loud, vintage display, signage feel, high impact, distinctive texture, bracketed, flared, ink-trap, notched, blocky.
A heavy, display-oriented serif with broad proportions and compact counters. The design uses bracketed, flared serifs and pronounced wedge-like terminals, with frequent notches and cut-ins that create an ink-trap feel in joins and corners. Strokes are largely uniform with modest modulation, and the overall rhythm is chunky and tightly packed, producing strong horizontal color in text. Letterforms lean toward squared geometry with angular inner corners, and numerals follow the same stout, cut-in construction for a cohesive set.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as posters, titles, signage, branding marks, and packaging where its notched serifs and broad stance can be appreciated. It can work for brief bursts of display copy, but long passages may feel heavy due to tight counters and strong overall color.
The font conveys a bold, frontier-meets-circus tone: assertive, rugged, and attention-grabbing. Its carved, notched details evoke vintage signage and old poster lettering, giving it a nostalgic, theatrical energy that reads more like a headline voice than a quiet book face.
The design appears intended to reinterpret conventional serif construction with exaggerated weight and width, adding carved notches and flared serifs to create a distinctive, vintage display voice. Its consistent treatment across capitals, lowercase, and numerals suggests a focus on cohesive headline typography and recognizable shapes at a glance.
At text sizes the dense blackness and small apertures can cause letters to visually merge, while the distinctive notches remain a key identifying feature. The italic is not shown, and the upright styling relies on weight, width, and terminal shapes rather than calligraphic slant for character.