Emirola Font is a modern, elegant serif font designed by Eric Kurniawan from Bali, Indonesia. He runs a design studio called Burntilldead. The font was made for fancy, high-end projects like luxury brand logos, magazine layouts, and wedding invitations. It looks classic but still fresh and modern.
Demo Font
Who made it: Eric Kurniawan, a designer who started Burntilldead in 2004 and has created over 196 fonts.
Why it exists: To give designers an affordable yet premium-looking font for luxury projects that works both in print and on screens.
Burntilldead started as Eric’s illustration side project in 2004. He later worked in the surf industry for five years before focusing full-time on fonts in 2015. Emirola officially launched on July 22, 2024. Within months, it was named one of the fonts to watch in 2025.
Emirola works great for:
Emirola comes in 6 weights (thickness levels):
What you get in each weight:
You can buy individual weights or the whole family.
Available at:
License types:
Personal use: Free demo version available
Commercial use: Must buy the full version
No new versions have been announced. However, the font might eventually get:
Don’t expect updates before 2026 since it’s brand new.
How it looks:
Burntilldead’s logo doesn’t use Emirola – it uses a custom edgy sans-serif font. Emirola is shown in luxury mockups (perfume bottles, wine labels) to prove how fancy it can look.
Emirola is a new (2024) elegant serif font from Bali-based designer Eric Kurniawan. It has 6 weights, supports 106 languages, and is built for luxury projects like branding and magazines. It’s paid, costs less than many high-end fonts, and works great in print and digital. No italics yet, but it’s already popular and will likely grow.
If you’re looking for similar premium fonts, you might also want to check out:
Q: Who designed Emirola?
A: Eric Kurniawan of Burntilldead in Bali.
Q: When did it come out?
A: July 22, 2024.
Q: How many styles?
A: Six weights (thin to black), but all are upright – no italics yet.
Q: Can I use it for a logo?
A: Yes, that’s what it’s made for.
Q: Is it free?
A: No, it’s a paid font. Only the designer’s other fonts are free.
Q: What languages does it support?
A: Over 106 languages using Latin letters.
Q: Where can I buy it?
A: MyFonts, Creative Market, and other major font sites.
Q: Will there be a free version?
A: No plans announced.
Q: What makes it special?
A: High-end look, affordable price, and works well on screens and paper.
Q: Are more weights coming?
A: Possibly italics later, but nothing official yet.