Serif Forked/Spurred Myfo 7 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, book titles, posters, packaging, invitations, old-world, storybook, quaint, decorative, traditional, decorative flavor, vintage tone, textured display, storybook feel, traditional serif, spurred, forked, tapered, calligraphic, lively.
This serif design features tapered strokes with a moderate thick–thin relationship and frequent forked, spurred terminals that add sharp, ornamental accents. Curves are full and slightly springy, while many verticals end in pointed, flared serifs rather than flat brackets, creating a crisp silhouette. Proportions feel compact with a steady rhythm, and letterforms show subtle irregularity in widths and joins that keeps the texture lively in text. Numerals match the letter styling with pointed terminals and slightly calligraphic shaping.
Best suited to headlines, titles, pull quotes, and short passages where its spurred terminals can be appreciated. It works well for themed packaging, event invitations, and editorial display settings that aim for a vintage or storybook mood. For body text, it will be most comfortable at generous sizes and looser spacing to prevent the ornament from feeling crowded.
The overall tone is old-world and storybook-like, evoking traditional printing and folkloric or gothic-adjacent display typography without becoming overly heavy. Its spurred details give it a crafted, slightly mischievous personality that reads as decorative and characterful rather than strictly formal.
The font appears intended to reinterpret a traditional serif through consistent forked terminals and tapered, calligraphic strokes, prioritizing character and historical flavor over neutrality. The design aims to provide a distinctive display voice that remains readable while adding decorative edge and rhythmic texture.
In longer lines the repeated forked terminals create a sparkling, textured edge, especially on ascenders and capitals. The design’s pointed endings and narrow internal spaces can make dense settings feel busy, while larger sizes emphasize the distinctive ornamental finish.