Blackletter Sihy 7 is a bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, packaging, album covers, medieval, authoritative, ceremonial, dramatic, traditional, historic evocation, display impact, formal branding, gothic tone, angular, ornate, calligraphic, broken strokes, diamond terminals.
A dense blackletter design with sharply broken strokes, steep diagonal joins, and crisp, faceted terminals. Vertical stems dominate, while bowls and arches are built from angular segments that create a rhythmic, textured color across lines. Contrast is pronounced, with thick main strokes and finer connecting hairlines, and many terminals resolve into pointed or diamond-like cuts. Uppercase forms are compact and formal with prominent internal counters, while lowercase maintains a consistent, upright cadence with narrow apertures and strong vertical emphasis. Numerals follow the same chiseled logic, reading as sturdy, constructed forms rather than rounded text figures.
Best suited for display applications such as headlines, posters, logotypes, and titles where its angular detailing can be appreciated. It also fits branding and packaging that aims for tradition, craft, or gothic heritage, and works well for album covers and event graphics that need a forceful, historic voice.
The font conveys a historic, ceremonial tone—solemn, traditional, and slightly intimidating in the way it fills space with dark texture and sharp detail. It suggests institutional authority and old-world craft, with a dramatic presence that feels at home in heraldic, ecclesiastical, or gothic-inspired contexts.
The design appears intended to evoke classic blackletter manuscript and engraved signage traditions, emphasizing sharp construction, high contrast, and a commanding overall color. Its consistent broken-stroke vocabulary suggests a focus on dramatic display readability rather than quiet, long-form text comfort.
In paragraph settings the letterforms knit into a continuous patterned band, where word shapes rely on vertical rhythm and distinctive capitals. The sharp joins and tight counters create strong visual impact, but also a deliberately dense texture that benefits from generous size and spacing in display use.