Serif Contrasted Tipe 6 is a bold, wide, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, magazines, branding, posters, packaging, editorial, fashion, dramatic, luxury, theatrical, display impact, editorial tone, luxury branding, modern classic, vertical stress, hairline serifs, sharp terminals, flared joins, crisp edges.
This typeface is a high‑contrast serif with a distinctly vertical stress: thick, weighty main strokes are paired with very fine hairlines and razor-like serifs. The letterforms feel expansive and slightly irregular in set width, giving the rhythm a lively, display-forward texture. Serifs are delicate and sharp, with minimal bracketing, and many joins show crisp, chiseled transitions that heighten the contrast. Round letters (O, Q, C) are strongly modeled, while diagonals (V, W, X, Y) read as bold wedges with thin connecting hairlines, reinforcing a dramatic, sculpted silhouette.
Works best for large-size typography such as magazine headlines, fashion and lifestyle layouts, premium branding, and poster titles where contrast can shine. It can also support short bursts of text (pull quotes, subheads, decks) when set generously with comfortable spacing.
The overall tone is glamorous and assertive, with a couture/editorial polish that reads as premium and attention-seeking. Its extreme contrast and crisp detailing create a sense of drama and sophistication, suited to designs that want to feel stylish, modern-classical, and impactful.
The design appears intended to deliver a contemporary take on classic high-contrast serifs, maximizing drama through bold vertical stems, needle-thin hairlines, and crisp serifs. Its width and dynamic rhythm suggest a focus on eye-catching display typography with an upscale editorial character.
The design relies on fine hairlines and small details (especially in diagonals and internal counters), so clarity will depend on size and reproduction conditions. In text settings it produces a punchy, high-contrast texture with prominent capitals and strong word shapes, best treated as a display voice rather than an all-purpose reading face.