Blackletter Nusu 13 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, certificates, gothic, authoritative, ceremonial, historic, dramatic, heritage display, branding impact, ceremonial tone, historical evocation, angular, faceted, blackletter caps, diamond terminals, broken strokes.
A sharp, faceted blackletter with broken strokes and crisp angles throughout. Stems are heavy and compact, with diamond-like terminals and beveled joins that create a chiseled, high-ink presence. Counters are relatively tight and polygonal, and the rhythm relies on repeated verticals and consistent inner notches. Capitals feel structured and architectural, while lowercase forms maintain a disciplined, straight-backed texture with occasional pointed entry/exit details. Numerals match the same carved, angular construction for a unified set.
Best suited to short display settings where its angular detailing can be appreciated: headlines, posters, mastheads, and identity marks. It also fits packaging and label work that calls for tradition or craft cues, as well as certificate-style pieces where a formal, ceremonial voice is desirable. For longer passages, generous size and spacing help preserve clarity.
The overall tone is formal and commanding, with a medieval manuscript and heraldic flavor. Its dense, black texture reads as ceremonial and traditional, lending a sense of gravity and spectacle. The sharp geometry adds a slightly aggressive edge that can feel dramatic and uncompromising in headlines.
The font appears intended to deliver a classic blackletter voice with a clean, consistently faceted construction, balancing ornament with disciplined structure. Its cohesive caps, lowercase, and numerals suggest a focus on strong branding impact and period-evocative display typography rather than neutral text work.
The design favors strong vertical patterning and crisp corner logic over flowing curves, giving text a woven, lattice-like color at larger sizes. Openings and internal apertures are intentionally restrained, which enhances the dark, authoritative look but increases visual density as line lengths grow.