Serif Normal Guluf 10 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: book text, editorial, magazines, essays, quotations, classic, literary, formal, traditional, text italic, readability, traditional voice, editorial emphasis, print tradition, bracketed, oldstyle, calligraphic, diagonal stress, open counters.
This serif italic shows a traditional, oldstyle construction with softly bracketed serifs and moderate stroke modulation. The italic is clearly cursive in its axis and rhythm, with gently tapered entry and exit strokes that keep letterforms lively without becoming overly decorative. Proportions are balanced and text-oriented: round letters have open counters, stems are slightly wedge-shaped, and curves transition smoothly into serifs for an even color on the page. Numerals and capitals follow the same slanted, calligraphic logic, maintaining consistent contrast and controlled terminals.
This font is well suited to long-form reading in books, essays, and editorial layouts where an italic serif voice is needed for emphasis, quotations, captions, or secondary text. It also works effectively in magazine typography and other print-like contexts that benefit from a traditional, text-first italic with a calm, consistent texture.
The overall tone is bookish and established, suggesting the voice of printed literature and editorial typography. Its italic slant adds a polite dynamism, reading as refined and slightly expressive rather than flamboyant. The impression is dependable and cultured, suited to conveying seriousness, tradition, and clarity.
The design appears intended as a conventional text serif italic that brings gentle calligraphic motion to continuous reading. Its moderated contrast and bracketed serifs aim to keep a stable typographic color while still offering the expressive cues expected from an italic companion for editorial typography.
In the sample text, spacing and stroke rhythm support continuous reading, with a steady baseline flow and a cohesive serif system across upper- and lowercase. The italic forms retain conventional, recognizable shapes, prioritizing legibility and continuity in paragraphs over novelty.