Serif Flared Yari 7 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: book text, editorial, magazines, branding, packaging, literary, classic, refined, institutional, readability, editorial tone, classic authority, warm refinement, flared terminals, bracketed serifs, humanist, calligraphic, open counters.
A text-oriented serif with gently flared stroke endings and subtly bracketed serifs that give the outlines a slightly calligraphic, humanist feel. Curves are smooth and open, with moderate apertures in letters like C, S, and e, and counters that stay clear in running text. The uppercase shows steady proportions and restrained detailing, while the lowercase maintains an even rhythm with compact, readable forms; terminals often finish with a soft wedge or flare rather than a sharp slab. Figures are lining-style and fairly traditional in construction, matching the text color and pacing of the alphabet.
Well-suited to long-form reading contexts such as books, essays, and magazine layouts, where its steady texture and open forms support comfortable paragraph setting. It can also work effectively for cultured branding, packaging, and institutional communications that benefit from a classic serif voice with a slightly contemporary, flared finish.
The overall tone is bookish and composed, balancing classic serif formality with a warmer, less rigid hand-made influence from the flared terminals. It feels refined and trustworthy rather than showy, lending a calm, editorial voice to headings and paragraphs alike.
The design appears intended to deliver a dependable text serif with added warmth and character through flared terminals and subtly modeled joins. It aims for an even, readable typographic color while offering enough distinctive detailing to feel curated in editorial and identity use.
Notable stylistic cues include the pronounced flaring at the ends of verticals on letters such as I, J, and l, and the gently sculpted diagonals on V, W, and Y that avoid overly sharp joins. The lowercase g is single-storey and the a is double-storey, reinforcing a traditional text flavor while keeping the palette approachable.