Blackletter Oppu 10 is a bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, book covers, packaging, logos, medieval, dramatic, whimsical, theatrical, storybook, period feel, expressiveness, display impact, handcrafted charm, thematic branding, angular, faceted, wedge-serif, calligraphic, irregular.
A bold, high-contrast display face with a hand-drawn blackletter flavor, built from sharp wedges and faceted curves. Strokes swell and taper abruptly, with pronounced triangular terminals and blade-like serifs that create a cut-paper silhouette. Letterforms lean on simplified gothic structure—compact bowls, pointed joins, and occasional notched counters—while maintaining an intentionally uneven, drawn rhythm. Uppercase forms are broad and imposing, and the lowercase keeps a modest x-height with varied widths and lively, slightly quirky construction. Numerals follow the same chiseled logic, mixing rounded counters with angular cuts for a cohesive set.
Best suited to short, high-impact text such as headlines, posters, titles, and cover typography where its carved, gothic personality can dominate. It also works well for themed branding—fantasy, historical, Halloween, or tavern-style packaging—where a handcrafted medieval tone is desired. Use generous size and breathing room to preserve its angular details and internal counters.
The font evokes medieval signage and folk-tale printing, combining gothic authority with a playful, slightly mischievous energy. Its jagged edges and punchy contrast give it a theatrical presence that feels ceremonial, spooky, and story-driven rather than formal or modern.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold blackletter impression with a more hand-rendered, approachable twist, trading strict historical fidelity for expressive wedges, lively proportions, and strong display impact.
Spacing and glyph width variation contribute to an organic texture, especially in longer lines where the rhythm feels deliberately irregular. The strongest impression comes from the repeated wedge terminals and sharp inflections, which read clearly at display sizes but can visually crowd in dense setting.