Serif Flared Meho 7 is a very bold, normal width, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, magazine, branding, packaging, editorial, dramatic, classic, assertive, stylish, display impact, editorial voice, brand character, classic-modern blend, flared, ink-trap feel, sculpted, calligraphic, teardrop terminals.
A sculpted serif with sharply flared stroke endings and pronounced thick–thin modulation. The letterforms show wedge-like terminals and pointed, teardrop-style joins that create an ink-trap-like bite in corners, especially where diagonals meet stems. Curves are compact and weighty with tight apertures, while verticals remain dominant and crisp, giving the design a taut, poster-ready texture. Uppercase proportions feel stately and slightly condensed in presence, and the lowercase maintains a sturdy rhythm with strongly modeled bowls and decisive entry/exit strokes.
Best suited to headlines, magazine display, and poster typography where its flared terminals and sculpted contrast can read clearly. It can add a premium, editorial voice to branding, packaging, and titles, especially in larger sizes. For longer passages, it will work most effectively in short blocks or pull quotes where the dense texture becomes a stylistic asset.
The overall tone is commanding and theatrical, pairing classical bookish cues with a modern, carved display attitude. It reads as confident and slightly flamboyant, with enough refinement to feel premium rather than novelty. The sharp terminals and high-contrast modeling add a sense of tension and elegance that suits attention-grabbing typography.
The design appears intended as a high-impact serif that blends classical structure with sharply tapered, flared finishing to create a memorable silhouette. Its consistent carving-like details suggest a focus on display performance and brandable character rather than neutrality. The emphasis on dramatic joins and terminals aims to deliver a distinctive texture across both uppercase and lowercase.
The font’s angular notches and tapered terminals create distinctive internal negative shapes that become more pronounced at larger sizes. Numerals follow the same chiseled logic, with strong silhouettes and pointed details that keep them visually consistent with the capitals. In continuous text, the strong contrast and tight apertures emphasize texture over softness, making spacing and size choice important for comfortable reading.