Blackletter Ofri 2 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, book covers, logos, packaging, medieval, gothic, folkloric, dramatic, rustic, historical flavor, display impact, handmade texture, theatrical branding, angular, wedge serif, broken stroke, inked, compact.
A heavy, slanted display face built from broken, blackletter-like strokes with chunky, wedge-ended terminals. Letterforms have an uneven, hand-cut rhythm: counters are small, curves are slightly faceted, and joins often pinch into sharp notches that create a lively, irregular silhouette. The texture is dense and dark, with bold stems and occasional spur-like projections that evoke chiseled or brush-carved construction. Numerals match the letterforms with similarly stout shapes and angled cuts.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as titles, posters, chapter heads, and branding where a medieval or gothic flavor is desired. It can work for labels and packaging that aim for an old-world, crafted aesthetic, but is less ideal for long passages at small sizes due to its dense texture and tight counters.
The overall tone feels medieval and theatrical, with a gothic seriousness tempered by a handmade, storybook roughness. Its emphatic weight and fractured forms suggest folklore, fantasy, and old-world craft rather than modern neutrality.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, legible blackletter-inspired voice with a deliberately handmade edge—combining traditional broken-stroke cues with rounded, chunky proportions for strong display impact.
The slant and irregular stroke breaks create a forward motion and a mottled texture in paragraphs; it reads best when given generous size and spacing. Round letters like O/Q are more blocky than circular, and diagonals and terminals frequently resolve into sharp wedges that reinforce the carved look.