Serif Flared Kobu 9 is a bold, wide, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'FS Kim' by Fontsmith (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, magazine, book covers, posters, branding, editorial, dramatic, classic, authoritative, literary, impact, heritage, readability, display emphasis, editorial voice, bracketed serifs, sharp terminals, sculpted, incised feel, calligraphic.
A robust serif with pronounced stroke contrast and broad proportions. Vertical stems read strong and steady while curves and joins swell and taper, giving the letterforms a subtly sculpted, flared feel at terminals and serifs. Serifs are bracketed and often sharpen into wedge-like points, and counters are generously open, which helps the heavy weight stay legible. The overall rhythm is energetic, with crisp edges, assertive diagonals, and a slightly calligraphic modulation that keeps the texture lively in words and lines.
Best suited to headlines, subheads, and short-to-medium passages where its contrast and flared detailing can be appreciated. It works well for magazine layouts, book covers, theatrical or cultural posters, and brand identities that want a classic yet attention-grabbing serif voice.
The tone is bold and editorial, pairing classical bookish cues with a more theatrical, high-impact presence. It feels authoritative and premium, suited to headlines that need gravitas and a touch of drama rather than quiet neutrality.
This design appears intended to deliver a traditional serif foundation with heightened contrast and sharpened, flared terminals for extra presence. The goal seems to be a display-capable text face that maintains readability while projecting a confident, editorial character.
Uppercase forms carry a stately, poster-like weight, while the lowercase shows distinctive, sharp finishing strokes and strong thick–thin transitions that become especially noticeable in pairs like r/s/t and in rounded letters such as o/e. Numerals appear sturdy and display-oriented, matching the same sculpted contrast and pointed serif language for cohesive titling.