Serif Normal Vime 1 is a regular weight, very wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, editorial, packaging, modern, technical, sleek, futuristic, confident, modernize serif, display impact, clean elegance, premium tone, flared serifs, rounded terminals, extended width, open apertures, geometric.
A low-contrast serif with strongly extended proportions and a clean, engineered construction. Strokes stay fairly even, with gently rounded corners and smooth curves that give the forms a streamlined feel. Serifs are minimal and often flared rather than bracketed, reading more like subtle fins on key joins and terminals. Counters are generous and apertures are open, while the overall spacing and rhythm feel airy due to the wide set and broad letterforms.
Best suited to headlines, titling, and short editorial settings where its extended width and sleek serif details can be appreciated. It can work well for branding and packaging that want a modern, refined voice with a slightly technical edge, and for display typography in cultural or entertainment contexts.
The tone is contemporary and slightly futuristic, pairing a classic serif skeleton with a sleek, technical finish. It feels poised and confident, projecting clarity and control rather than warmth or nostalgia. The wide stance adds a display-forward presence that can read cinematic or high-end when used at size.
Likely intended to blend contemporary, geometric clarity with understated serif cues, creating a refined display serif that stays clean at larger sizes. The design emphasizes width, openness, and a smooth finish to deliver a modern, premium feel without relying on high contrast or ornate detailing.
Round glyphs (like O and 0) are notably wide and smoothly drawn, and the numerals follow the same streamlined logic with soft curves and stable, horizontal emphasis. In text, the extended width and restrained detailing make a distinctive texture that remains orderly, with terminals and flares providing just enough serif character to avoid a purely sans impression.