Serif Flared Mykim 11 is a bold, wide, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Jazmín' by Latinotype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, editorial, magazines, book covers, branding, dramatic, classic, authoritative, formal, impact, editorial voice, premium tone, classic flavor, brand presence, bracketed, beaked, flared, tapered, calligraphic.
A high-contrast serif with sturdy verticals and sharply tapered hairlines, showing pronounced flaring where strokes meet the terminals. Serifs are wedge-like and often beaked, giving joins and stroke endings a sculpted, slightly calligraphic feel. Curves are generous and bold, counters stay open, and the overall rhythm is energetic due to alternating thick-thin transitions and varied internal spacing. The lowercase shows a traditional, two-storey structure where applicable, with compact terminals and a distinctly shaped ear/shoulder treatment that reinforces the flared, chiseled look.
Best suited to display typography such as magazine headlines, section openers, book and album covers, and brand marks that benefit from high contrast and crisp detailing. It can also work for short pull quotes and large-format signage where the tapered hairlines and flared terminals have enough size to reproduce cleanly.
The font projects a confident, editorial voice—dramatic and stylish without becoming ornamental. Its strong contrast and flared details evoke a classic, print-forward sensibility that feels premium and assertive, suited to statements and headlines that need presence.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, attention-grabbing serif with a refined, old-style-meets-modern flavor, using flared terminals and strong contrast to create a distinctive editorial texture. It prioritizes impact and character over neutrality, aiming to look prestigious and deliberate in prominent settings.
Numerals match the letterforms with heavy main strokes and refined hairlines, producing a stately, display-oriented texture. Diagonals and pointed joins (notably in forms like V/W/X) emphasize sharpness, while rounded letters maintain a smooth, weighty silhouette that keeps the design from feeling brittle.