Serif Normal Ligab 16 is a regular weight, wide, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: magazines, book text, headlines, pull quotes, brand editorial, editorial, classic, literary, refined, authoritative, editorial text, classic tone, premium finish, headline support, bracketed, tapered, sharp terminals, deep joins, open counters.
This serif typeface combines crisp, wedge-like serifs with pronounced stroke contrast and a steady, upright axis. Curves are generously drawn with open counters, while joins and apertures stay clean and well-defined, giving letters a calm, editorial rhythm. Serifs are mostly bracketed and tapered, and terminals often end in sharp, knife-like points that add bite to the otherwise traditional skeleton. Uppercase forms feel stately and slightly expansive, while the lowercase maintains clear differentiation and readable proportions across text and figures.
It performs well in editorial typography such as magazines, book interiors, and long-form reading where contrast and bracketed serifs support a classic page color. The sharp, sculpted details also make it effective for headlines, pull quotes, and refined brand applications that want a traditional voice with a slightly dramatic finish.
The overall tone is classic and literary, projecting refinement and authority without looking fragile. Its sharp terminals and high-contrast modeling introduce a subtle dramatic edge, making it feel suited to cultured, editorial settings rather than purely neutral utility.
The design appears intended as a conventional text serif with elevated contrast and carefully finished terminals, balancing readability with a more sculpted, premium feel. It aims to deliver a familiar literary structure while adding crispness and distinction for contemporary editorial use.
The numerals and capitals share the same high-contrast logic, with rounded forms (like O/Q and 8/9) showing smooth modulation and crisp finishing. The italic is not shown, but the roman includes enough sculptural detail—especially in S-curves and diagonal strokes—to give display lines a polished presence while remaining coherent in paragraph settings.