Serif Contrasted Tyfe 9 is a very bold, normal width, very high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, editorial, magazine covers, branding, posters, fashion, dramatic, luxury, theatrical, display impact, luxury tone, editorial voice, dramatic motion, didone-like, vertical stress, hairline serifs, crisp, calligraphic.
A sharply slanted, high-contrast serif with a pronounced vertical stress and razor-thin hairlines against heavy stems. Serifs are fine and pointed, with crisp terminals and frequent teardrop/ball-like detailing where strokes resolve. Curves are taut and sculpted, and many joins show a calligraphic, cut-in feel that creates bright internal counters and a rhythmic, shimmering texture at display sizes. Proportions feel slightly condensed and tightly set, with lively, angular italic construction across both caps and lowercase.
Best suited to large-size typography where the hairlines and delicate serifs can remain clear: headlines, magazine and lookbook layouts, luxury branding, packaging titles, and poster-style statements. It can also work for short pull quotes or deck lines when given adequate size and spacing.
The tone is opulent and fashion-forward, projecting drama and confidence through steep italic motion and extreme thick–thin contrast. It reads as polished and high-end, with a flamboyant editorial energy that feels suited to bold statements rather than quiet utility.
The design appears aimed at delivering a couture, display-italic take on a modern high-contrast serif: fast, glamorous motion paired with crisp refinement. Its detailing and extreme contrast suggest an intention to stand out in headline settings and convey a premium, editorial voice.
Uppercase forms lean into formal display manners (notably the swash-like Q tail and the sculpted, knife-edged diagonals in letters like N, W, and X). Numerals match the same chiselled contrast and slanted stance, keeping the overall voice consistent across alphanumerics.