Blackletter Konu 1 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, album covers, branding, packaging, gothic, dramatic, medieval, severe, occult, historical evoke, dramatic display, ornamental impact, dark atmosphere, authoritative tone, angular, spiky, fractured, sharp terminals, calligraphic.
A condensed blackletter with tall proportions, sharply faceted strokes, and pronounced modulation between thick verticals and hairline joins. The letterforms are built from broken, angular segments with pointed terminals and small wedge-like entry strokes that read as pen-made. Counters are tight and often diamond-like, while curves are treated as clipped arcs rather than smooth bowls. Spacing is compact and the rhythm is strongly vertical, with ascenders and capitals rising prominently over a notably low x-height.
Best suited for short, impactful text such as headlines, mastheads, poster titles, and logo-style branding where its broken-stroke detailing can be appreciated. It works well for fantasy, historical, or dark-themed projects—album artwork, event flyers, book covers, and packaging—especially when set at larger sizes with generous tracking.
The overall tone is medieval and ceremonial, with a hard-edged, dramatic presence. Its spiky silhouettes and dark texture evoke tradition, mystery, and a slightly ominous or ritual feel. The style reads as authoritative and historic rather than casual or friendly.
The design appears intended to deliver an authentic blackletter flavor with crisp, blade-like terminals and a disciplined vertical cadence, optimized for strong atmosphere in display typography. Its condensed structure and dense texture suggest a focus on dramatic word shapes and period-inspired styling rather than extended reading.
Capitals are especially ornate with distinctive internal notches and abrupt stroke breaks, creating strong word shapes in display settings. Lowercase forms retain the fractured construction and can appear dense at smaller sizes, making the font best when given room and contrast. Numerals follow the same angular, calligraphic logic, matching the uppercase well for titling and date settings.