Serif Normal Lemor 15 is a regular weight, wide, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Bluteau', 'Bluteau Arabic', and 'Bluteau Hebrew' by DSType and 'Foreday Semi Serif', 'Foreday Serif', 'Nitida Text', and 'Nitida Text Plus' by Monotype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: book text, editorial, magazines, newspapers, academic, classic, formal, literary, authoritative, refined, text readability, classic tone, editorial authority, traditional styling, bracketed, crisp, tapered, sculpted, bookish.
This serif presents sharply cut, bracketed serifs and pronounced stroke modulation, with strong vertical stress and crisp, clean joins. Capitals are stately and open, with generous interior counters and a relatively broad stance, while the lowercase keeps a conventional text rhythm with compact joins and sturdy stems. Terminals tend to be wedge-like or subtly flared rather than rounded, giving the outlines a carved, print-forward look. Numerals follow the same high-contrast logic, with clear, traditional forms and distinct silhouettes.
This font is well suited to book and long-form editorial typography where a traditional serif texture and strong contrast help establish hierarchy and tone. It can also serve effectively in headlines, pull quotes, and section openers when a classic, institutionally minded voice is desired.
The overall tone is classic and formal, evoking traditional book typography and editorial seriousness. Its crisp contrast and sculpted serifs lend an authoritative, refined voice that feels established and trustworthy rather than casual.
The design appears intended as a conventional, high-contrast text serif that prioritizes a familiar reading rhythm and a polished, traditional appearance. Its proportions and crisp serif treatment suggest a focus on editorial credibility and typographic restraint rather than novelty.
In continuous text the face reads as evenly paced and stable, with clear differentiation between similar shapes (notably the straight, serifed i/l forms and the traditionally constructed capitals). The punctuation and spacing in the sample suggest a layout-friendly, conventional texture suited to long-form reading.