Serif Flared Womot 11 is a very light, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, editorial, book covers, magazines, branding, refined, literary, classical, airy, elegance, editorial clarity, premium tone, classical revival, flared serifs, calligraphic, delicate, crisp, open counters.
A delicate, high-contrast serif with tapered, calligraphic construction and subtly flared stroke endings. Stems stay slender through the midsections and broaden into sharp, wedge-like terminals, giving the letterforms a chiseled yet airy silhouette. Capitals are elegant and generously proportioned with smooth, round bowls (notably C, G, O, Q) and crisp joins; the A has a pointed apex and fine crossbar, while E and F show restrained, knife-edge arms. Lowercase maintains an even rhythm with a two-storey a, a compact two-storey g with a small ear, and a slender f with a gentle terminal; counters remain open and the overall spacing reads calm and controlled. Numerals follow the same contrast and taper, with a curving 2 and a softly arced 3, pairing well with text settings.
Best suited to headlines, pull quotes, and display typography where its contrast and flared terminals can read cleanly. It also fits editorial design—magazines, book covers, and cultured branding—especially when paired with ample white space and careful typesetting.
The tone is refined and literary, combining classical bookish manners with a lightly modern, fashion-editorial sharpness. Its thin hairlines and flared terminals convey sophistication and restraint, lending a quiet sense of luxury without becoming ornamental.
The design appears intended to blend classical serif proportions with a distinctly tapered, flared stroke finish, creating a light, elegant voice for premium editorial and branding contexts. The consistent contrast and calm spacing suggest a focus on polished reading rhythm at display and large text sizes.
The sample text shows a consistent rhythm and clear word shapes at larger sizes, where the hairlines and flared terminals become a defining feature. At smaller sizes or on low-resolution output, the finest strokes may appear more fragile, so it benefits from generous sizing and comfortable leading.