Serif Forked/Spurred Hiba 1 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: display type, posters, headlines, book covers, brand marks, gothic, storybook, antique, ornate, whimsical, add drama, evoke antiquity, decorative flair, title emphasis, historic mood, blackletter-tinged, spurred, forked, calligraphic, decorative.
A decorative serif with blackletter-leaning construction, combining sturdy verticals with tapered, brushlike joins and frequent forked or spurred terminals. Strokes show moderate contrast with pointed tips, small ink-trap-like notches, and teardrop/clubbed endings that create a lively, cut-and-thrust rhythm. Capitals are narrow and tall with flamboyant entry strokes and occasional interior hooks, while the lowercase keeps a compact, short-bodied feel with distinctive, looped descenders (notably on g, j, y) and angular shoulder shapes. Numerals follow the same carved, ornamental logic, with curled terminals and slightly irregular widths that enhance the handcrafted texture.
Best suited to display settings where the distinctive terminals and gothic-ornamental flavor can be appreciated—posters, headlines, book covers, game or film titles, packaging, and identity work that aims for an antique or mysterious tone. It can work for short pull quotes or subheads, but the dense detailing suggests avoiding very small sizes or long body copy.
The font conveys an antique, slightly gothic tone with a theatrical, storybook charm. Its spurs and forked terminals feel reminiscent of old signage and display lettering, lending a dramatic, folkloric character without becoming fully blackletter. Overall, it reads as expressive and ornamental rather than neutral or purely editorial.
Likely designed to blend traditional serif structure with blackletter-inspired ornamentation, creating a stylized, old-world voice for attention-grabbing titles. The consistent use of spurs, hooks, and forked endings suggests an emphasis on silhouette, personality, and historical atmosphere over plain readability.
Spacing and widths vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, which reinforces the bespoke, display-oriented personality. Several forms use inward curls and hooked finials that create strong silhouette interest at larger sizes, while the dense detailing can visually gather in longer passages.