Serif Normal Miram 15 is a bold, normal width, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, editorial, magazine, book titling, branding, classic, formal, stately, dramatic, heritage tone, premium polish, editorial impact, display emphasis, bracketed serifs, ball terminals, deep joins, crisp apexes, sculpted curves.
A high-contrast serif with strong thick-to-thin modulation and sharply tapered hairlines that create a crisp, chiseled silhouette. Serifs are bracketed and clean, with pointed, wedge-like endings and occasional ball terminals (notably in the lowercase). The capitals feel broad and monumental, with rounded bowls and firm vertical stress, while the lowercase shows compact, sturdy forms with pronounced joins and clear counters. Numerals follow the same display-forward logic, with bold primary strokes and thin, elegant connectors that read best at moderate-to-large sizes.
Well suited to headlines, pull quotes, and editorial layouts where contrast and elegance are assets. It can also serve for book covers, chapter openers, and brand wordmarks that want a traditional, upscale serif character. For extended reading, it will be most comfortable when set with generous size and spacing to protect the fine hairlines.
The overall tone is classic and editorial, projecting authority and refinement with a theatrical edge. Its glossy contrast and sculpted details evoke traditional book and magazine typography, leaning toward a premium, formal voice rather than casual or utilitarian styling.
This font appears designed to deliver a conventional, heritage serif voice with heightened contrast for impact, balancing traditional proportions with more dramatic stroke modulation. The intent is likely to provide a refined text-and-display companion that feels authoritative in print-like contexts while still making a strong statement in larger settings.
The design’s contrast and delicate hairlines create lively rhythm, especially in mixed-case text, but the thinnest strokes can become visually fragile at small sizes or on low-resolution output. Round letters and bowls maintain a smooth, polished curve, while diagonals and apexes stay crisp, giving headings a disciplined, upscale presence.