Serif Normal Mulav 6 is a regular weight, narrow, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: magazines, headlines, luxury branding, display type, posters, editorial, fashion, refined, dramatic, modern classic, elegant display, editorial impact, luxury tone, classic revival, hairline serifs, vertical stress, crisp terminals, elegant, stylish.
A high-contrast serif with a distinctly vertical emphasis and crisp, hairline finishing strokes. Thick stems and bowls pair with extremely fine cross-strokes and serifs, creating a sharp, clean rhythm with pronounced thick–thin transitions. Capitals are tall and commanding, with sculpted curves (notably in C, G, O, Q) and precise, tapered joins; lowercase shows compact, controlled forms with a two-storey a and g, a narrow, pointed r, and a tall, lightly bracketed t. Numerals mix strong verticals with delicate hairlines, keeping the overall texture glossy and tightly set.
Best suited to editorial headlines, fashion and beauty layouts, luxury branding, and large-format titles where its thin features and dramatic contrast can be preserved. It also works for short pull quotes, packaging accents, and refined signage when set with enough size and spacing to keep the hairlines clear.
The overall tone is polished and assertive, projecting a runway/editorial sophistication with a hint of theatrical contrast. Its razor-thin details and poised proportions read as premium and curated, suited to designs that want elegance with bite rather than warmth.
This appears designed to deliver a contemporary take on classic high-contrast serif typography: sleek, narrow, and impactful, with refined detailing for premium display use. The emphasis is on elegance and visual authority, favoring striking silhouettes and crisp finishing over utilitarian sturdiness.
The design’s extreme hairlines and sharp terminals reward generous sizing and careful reproduction, where the fine strokes can remain intact. In longer settings it creates a distinctive striped texture from repeated verticals, while round letters provide brief, controlled relief from the dominant stem rhythm.