Serif Flared Jufi 11 is a very bold, wide, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, book covers, dramatic, confident, retro, editorial, expressive, attention, drama, motion, vintage flavor, display impact, swashy, calligraphic, angular, flared, lively.
A heavy, right-leaning serif with pronounced contrast and visibly flared stroke endings that read like ink spread from a broad tool. Curves are full and compressed by the slant, while joins and terminals sharpen into wedge-like points, giving many letters a slightly swashy, wind-swept silhouette. The rhythm is energetic and uneven in a deliberate way, with varied interior spaces and strong black shapes that dominate the page. Numerals and capitals share the same punchy, sculpted presence, with bold bowls, tight apertures, and crisp tapering at stroke tips.
Best used for headlines, short bursts of copy, and titling where its strong contrast and flared terminals can be appreciated. It works well for posters, packaging, and branding that wants a bold, vintage-leaning voice, and can add drama to book covers or editorial feature openers. For longer passages, it’s most effective at larger sizes with generous spacing.
The overall tone is assertive and theatrical, mixing classic serif gravity with a lively, almost poster-like swagger. It feels retro and editorial at once—suited to attention-grabbing lines where a sense of motion and showmanship is desirable.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact through bold massing, dynamic italic motion, and sculpted, flared serif details. It prioritizes personality and display presence, evoking traditional serif forms while pushing them into a more expressive, attention-forward style.
In text settings the strong slant and flared endings create a busy texture and can reduce clarity at smaller sizes, but they also produce a distinctive headline color and strong word shapes. The design’s sharp tapers and swelling strokes give it a carved, display-driven character rather than a quiet reading voice.