Serif Contrasted Yera 2 is a very bold, very wide, very high contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, magazine, branding, packaging, dramatic, editorial, classic, theatrical, formal, impact, ornament, authority, display, heritage, vertical stress, hairline serifs, ball terminals, ink traps, deep joins.
A heavy, display-oriented serif with pronounced vertical stress and sharply thinned connections that create striking internal contrast. The letterforms are broad and compact-feeling despite their width, with rounded bowls and wedge-like hairline serifs that read as crisp accents against the dense main strokes. Counters tend to be generous and often vertically pinched, producing strong black–white rhythm in text. Several joins show deep cuts and small notches (ink-trap-like detailing), and terminals frequently resolve into small balls or teardrops, giving the silhouettes a carved, ornamental finish.
Best suited for headlines, large-scale editorial settings, posters, and brand marks where strong contrast and bold silhouettes can be appreciated. It can also work for packaging and promotional typography when a classic-but-dramatic serif voice is desired; at smaller sizes, the fine connections and hairlines may lose clarity and the texture can become visually dense.
The overall tone is emphatic and theatrical—confident, slightly vintage, and tuned for high-impact statements. Its strong contrast and decorative terminals evoke classic editorial and poster typography, with a sense of drama and formality.
The design appears intended to deliver a high-impact, high-contrast serif voice with decorative finishing details—optimized for display typography that feels classic yet assertive. Its broad proportions and sculpted terminals suggest an emphasis on distinctive silhouettes and strong typographic color over neutral text economy.
In the sample text, the weight and contrast create a pronounced sparkle and a tightly patterned texture, especially where thin links run between large rounded strokes. The numerals and uppercase feel particularly monumental, while the lowercase keeps the same high-contrast language with prominent dots and terminals that become noticeable stylistic features.