Serif Other Ramo 3 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, book covers, editorial, posters, branding, classic, storybook, formal, vintage, ornate, display focus, vintage appeal, added drama, classic tone, bracketed, flared, calligraphic, wedge-like, crisp.
This serif features sharp, wedge-like terminals and bracketed serifs paired with noticeable stroke contrast and crisp, tapered joins. Proportions skew slightly narrow in the capitals, while the lowercase feels compact with a relatively short x-height and prominent ascenders/descenders, giving the text line a lively vertical rhythm. Curves are drawn with a subtly calligraphic tension, and several letters show flared ends and pointed finials that add a decorative edge without turning into swashes. Numerals follow the same high-contrast logic, with strong verticals and thin linking strokes that read best at moderate to larger sizes.
It suits headlines, book covers, and editorial display settings where a traditional serif with extra character is desirable. The pronounced contrast and decorative terminals make it a strong choice for posters, mastheads, and branding where word-shape and presence matter more than ultra-neutral body-text uniformity.
The overall tone is classic and slightly theatrical, evoking old-style printed matter and storybook titling. Its sharp terminals and lively contrast add a hint of drama and formality, making it feel more expressive than a purely text-focused serif.
The design appears intended to reinterpret a traditional, high-contrast serif with added pointed terminals and flared serifs to boost personality and vintage appeal. It prioritizes distinctive silhouettes and dramatic texture for display-driven typography while remaining structured enough for short passages.
In paragraphs, the strong thick–thin pattern and tight internal counters create a dark, rhythmic texture; spacing appears comfortable but the thin strokes and pointed details become more prominent as size increases. The design’s distinctive terminals and flares give individual words a recognizable silhouette, especially in capitals and in letters with diagonal strokes.