SLTF Netsera - Calligraphic Serif Typeface

From€39 — €69

Introducing SLTF Netsera – a calligraphic editorial serif typeface designed to elevate elegance in every letterform. Meticulously crafted with over 900 characters, this font includes 170+ alternates and ligatures, offering a wide range of expressive possibilities for luxury branding, high-end packaging, magazine spreads, and romantic visual storytelling.

Netsera includes both...

Introducing SLTF Netsera – a calligraphic editorial serif typeface designed to elevate elegance in every letterform. Meticulously crafted with over 900 characters, this font includes 170+ alternates and ligatures, offering a wide range of expressive possibilities for luxury branding, high-end packaging, magazine spreads, and romantic visual storytelling.

Netsera includes both Regular and Italic versions, each full of character, detail, and gentle sophistication. Every curve, swash, and serif has been thoughtfully designed to balance refined structure with artistic fluidity. From graceful ascenders to swirling terminals, this font brings personality without overpowering your message.

Ideal for projects that demand a romantic but modern aesthetic, SLTF Netsera is your go-to choice for headlines, logos, fashion branding, and visual identities that need to feel elevated and intentional.

Multilingual support? Of course. This font works across 100+ languages, includes full punctuation, numerals, and is provided in OTF and WebFont formats.

Whether you’re designing a perfume label or a poetic editorial piece, Netsera is built to make your words unforgettable.

SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - the word New beside a red ranunculus on taupe
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - Rosé cosmetic bottle mockup with flowers in warm tones
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - wall of Italian surnames such as Russo Ferrari and Romano in cream on black
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - et ligature glyph showcase beside a protea flower
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - The Strange History of M.S. Maisel headline on sage green
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - Maison Lune fashion brand specimen on a figure on a moody beach
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - wall of French surnames such as Chevalier Marchand and Moreau in black on cream
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - style is a way to say who you are motivational headline with palm shadow
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - Rosé Noir perfume bottle and label mockup in an editorial layout
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - the word Siracusa over a dark shadowed figure
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - Render fashion magazine spread reading from catwalk to an art form
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - Verova wear your story tote bag mockup in cream
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - Ritual vertical headline on a card in a flower filled living room
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - From Madrid with love headline over a black and white Madrid street scene
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - espresso menu listing Espresso Ristretto Macchiato and Caffè Freddo over a dark coffee photo
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - the name Celine shown in calligraphic lowercase and caps over a black and white portrait
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - oversized Netsera wordmark on sage green
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - Museo del Angel Madrid editorial mockup repeated on crumpled paper
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - Atelier flower shop branding with an ampersand monogram on a soft photo
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - ffi and fk ligature showcase in black with red outline accents
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - Atelier de Sable logo on a kraft box mockup
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - Noirelle woven clothing label on a cream coat
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - Italian city specimen including Siracusa Catania and Reggio Calabria over a domed cathedral
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - flowing ffl and ffi ligature pattern on cream
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - two Rosé Noir perfume bottles with flowers in warm tones
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - Ciel de Minuit headline on a card over a figure in green
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - capital R alternates shown in black and orange
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - lowercase h alternates shown in black and orange
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - espresso menu listing Espresso Ristretto Macchiato and Caffè Freddo over a dark coffee photo
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - the word New beside a red ranunculus on taupe
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - the name Celine shown in calligraphic lowercase and caps over a black and white portrait
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - Rosé cosmetic bottle mockup with flowers in warm tones
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - oversized Netsera wordmark on sage green
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - wall of Italian surnames such as Russo Ferrari and Romano in cream on black
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - Museo del Angel Madrid editorial mockup repeated on crumpled paper
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - et ligature glyph showcase beside a protea flower
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - Atelier flower shop branding with an ampersand monogram on a soft photo
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - The Strange History of M.S. Maisel headline on sage green
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - ffi and fk ligature showcase in black with red outline accents
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - Maison Lune fashion brand specimen on a figure on a moody beach
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - Atelier de Sable logo on a kraft box mockup
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - wall of French surnames such as Chevalier Marchand and Moreau in black on cream
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - Noirelle woven clothing label on a cream coat
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - style is a way to say who you are motivational headline with palm shadow
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - Italian city specimen including Siracusa Catania and Reggio Calabria over a domed cathedral
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - Rosé Noir perfume bottle and label mockup in an editorial layout
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - flowing ffl and ffi ligature pattern on cream
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - the word Siracusa over a dark shadowed figure
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - two Rosé Noir perfume bottles with flowers in warm tones
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - Render fashion magazine spread reading from catwalk to an art form
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - Ciel de Minuit headline on a card over a figure in green
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - Verova wear your story tote bag mockup in cream
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - capital R alternates shown in black and orange
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - Ritual vertical headline on a card in a flower filled living room
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - lowercase h alternates shown in black and orange
SLTF Netsera calligraphic editorial serif - From Madrid with love headline over a black and white Madrid street scene

Select a license, pick your styles - then add to cart when you're ready.

Step 01: Pick Your License

Standard Desktop License
Webfont License
E-pub / eBook License
App License
Template / Server License

Step 02: Pick Your Font

Complete Family
Regular
Italic

Your Selection

SLTF Netsera - Calligraphic Serif Typeface

Total

FAQs

Just me, Alen. I design the fonts, build the website, answer emails, test every file, and pack everything into this little corner of the internet myself. If you reach out, you are talking directly to the person who drew the letters.

Yes. All paid licenses allow commercial use. That includes branding, packaging, posters, social media graphics, YouTube thumbnails, editorial layouts, and pretty much any static design work. If you are not sure, tell me what you are working on and I’ll guide you to the right license.

Here is the simplest breakdown:

  • Desktop License
    For logos, branding, print, social media graphics, packaging, and any static image.
  • Webfont License
    For embedding the font into a website through CSS so text displays live.
  • App or E-Pub License
    For embedding the font inside an app, game, or digital book.
  • Template or Server License
    For editable templates on Canva, Templett, Corjl, or any system where the end user edits text.

If your project mixes several use cases, you might need more than one license. Ask me if you are unsure.

Absolutely. Logo design is fully covered by the Desktop license. You can trademark the logo design you create with my font. You just can’t trademark the entire typeface itself. Convert your final logo to outlines before sending it to your client.

The person or company installing and using the fonts needs the license. If you install the fonts to create work for your client, you need the license. If the client also installs the fonts internally, they need their own license too.

Yes, but with rules:

  • For designing static graphics (Instagram posts, posters, thumbnails): Desktop License is enough. Upload the font to your Canva Brand Kit and export images.
  • For selling editable templates where the buyer changes the text: You need the Template or Server License. This protects the actual font files and keeps everything legal.

If your customer edits text, you need the Template or Server License. One license covers one template product. Never include or redistribute the font files.

Usually yes.

  • You need the Desktop License to design the branding, layouts, and mockups.
  • Your client needs the Webfont License to host the font on their website.

If the font only appears in a static logo image on the website, Desktop is enough.

  • Desktop License: OTF (recommended) and sometimes TTF
  • Webfont License: WOFF and WOFF2

OTF is always the best choice for desktop work and gives you all the OpenType features.

Install OTF. It is the modern format that supports ligatures, alternates, swashes, and smoother curves. Use TTF only if an older machine or tool specifically requires it.

  • Mac: Double click the OTF file and hit Install
  • Windows: Right click and choose Install or Install for All Users


Then restart your design apps so they can refresh their font list.

You need software that supports OpenType features:

  • Illustrator and InDesign: Use the Glyphs panel
  • Photoshop: Window → Glyphs
  • Canva: Copy and paste PUA encoded characters
  • Figma: Basic alternates work, but not full glyph access (yet)

If you want, send me a screenshot and I’ll point you to the right panel.

This is usually a cached font list issue. Try this:

  1. Close your design software completely
  2. Reopen it
  3. If that doesn’t work, restart your computer

This forces your system to rebuild its font list.

Yes, but you need the correct license:

  • App License for embedding inside an iOS or Android app.
  • E-Pub License for embedding inside an EPUB, Kindle file, or interactive PDF.

If you are only designing the book cover as an image, Desktop is enough.

You can modify the vector shapes after converting to outlines in Illustrator. You cannot open, rename, reverse engineer, or change the actual font software files. The font file is protected software.

No. Sharing the actual font files outside your licensed team is not allowed.

  • Printers: You can send them PDFs with fonts embedded or text converted to outlines, but not the font files.
  • Clients: If they want to install the fonts on their own devices, they need their own license.
  • Collaborators: Any external designer using the font on their own machine needs their own license too.

You can share final artwork. You cannot share the raw font software.

Yes. If your project involves TV, streaming, a very large number of users, or a software platform where many end users interact with the fonts, I can prepare a custom license.

Tell me:

  • What the project is
  • Where the fonts will appear
  • Rough audience size or user count

I will review it and send you a tailored offer so everything is covered properly.

Fonts are digital files and cannot be returned once downloaded, so all sales are generally final. But I’m human. If you bought the same font twice or you find a genuine technical issue, email me. I want you to be happy with your purchase.

If you created an account at checkout, log in and re download your fonts anytime. If not, send me your order details and I will email you fresh links.

Just use the contact form on my website or email me directly at info@silverstagtype.com I reply personally. I’m one person, not a support team, so please give me a little bit of time. But I always get back to you.