Serif Contrasted Typu 9 is a very bold, normal width, very high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, editorial, branding, logotypes, posters, fashion, luxury, dramatic, theatrical, display impact, elegant emphasis, brand signature, editorial flair, swashy, calligraphic, didone-like, engraved, pointed serifs.
A sharply inclined serif with pronounced thick–thin modulation and crisp hairline details. The forms are built from broad, weighty main strokes that taper quickly into needle-like terminals, creating a chiseled, high-gloss silhouette. Serifs read as pointed and delicate rather than bracketed, and many letters show sweeping entry/exit strokes and hooked terminals that add motion. Counters are compact in places due to the heavy strokes, while the overall rhythm remains lively with small calligraphic inflections and a slightly sculpted, engraved feel.
Best suited to short-form settings where its contrast and fine details can render cleanly: magazine headlines, cover lines, branding wordmarks, premium packaging, and event or theater posters. It can also work for pull quotes or large subheads when given generous spacing and enough size to preserve the hairlines.
The typeface projects a couture, headline-forward personality—confident, dramatic, and refined. Its energetic italic slant and razor-thin accents evoke fashion mastheads, luxury packaging, and classic high-contrast display typography with a modern, punchy edge.
The design appears intended as a statement display italic that amplifies contrast and elegance while adding expressive terminals for a signature look. It prioritizes impact and sophistication over neutrality, aiming to deliver a distinctive, fashion-oriented voice in titles and branding.
Uppercase has a stately, poster-like presence with strong diagonals and clean vertical stress, while lowercase introduces more flourish—especially in letters like g, j, y, and z where terminals curl and flick. Figures are equally stylized, with sharp contrasts and occasional swash-like strokes that make them feel designed for display rather than utilitarian reading.