Serif Normal Sibub 7 is a regular weight, wide, very high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, editorial, magazines, branding, posters, fashion, classic, refined, dramatic, elegance, display impact, editorial tone, luxury branding, italic emphasis, calligraphic, bracketed, flared, swashy, crisp.
A high-contrast italic serif with crisp hairlines and weighty main strokes, showing a pronounced diagonal stress and a lively, calligraphic rhythm. Serifs are bracketed and often flare into sharp, tapered terminals, giving joins and exits a slightly swashed character rather than rigid geometry. Proportions read on the wider side with generous set width and open counters, while capitals feel sturdy and sculpted against the delicate connecting strokes. Overall spacing looks balanced for display and short text, with consistent modulation and clean curves across rounds and diagonals.
This style is well suited to headlines, pull quotes, magazine covers, and other editorial settings where contrast and italic energy are desirable. It also fits luxury branding, invitations, and poster typography, especially at medium-to-large sizes where the fine hairlines and sharp terminals can shine.
The font projects a polished, editorial elegance with a dramatic, high-fashion tone. Its sharp terminals and sweeping italic motion add a sense of sophistication and ceremony, suitable for premium branding and stylized headlines without feeling overly ornate.
The design appears intended to deliver a contemporary take on classic italic serifs: sharp, high-contrast letterforms with a confident slant and refined finishing. It prioritizes expressive rhythm and premium tone for display-oriented typography while maintaining recognizable, conventional serif structures.
Several forms show assertive entry and exit strokes (notably in diagonals and rounded lowercase), creating a dynamic baseline flow. Numerals echo the same contrast and italic slant, with tapered curves and crisp finials that keep the figure style visually aligned with the letters.