Blackletter Mire 9 is a light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: fantasy titles, game ui, packaging, posters, book covers, medieval, old-world, arcane, gothic, handcrafted, thematic display, historic flavor, hand-drawn texture, decorative impact, angular, broken strokes, spurred, faceted, calligraphic.
This typeface features broken, angular letterforms with faceted joins and small wedge-like terminals that suggest a pen-cut or chiseled construction. Strokes tend to run straight with abrupt directional changes, and curves are rendered as segmented arcs, creating a crisp, crystalline rhythm. Capitals are tall and narrow with simplified blackletter structure, while lowercase characters keep a compact, vertical stance with pointed shoulders and occasional hooks. Counters are small and irregularly polygonal, and spacing feels slightly uneven in a deliberate, handcrafted way, reinforcing the drawn quality across letters and numerals.
It works best as a display face for titles, chapter heads, logos, and themed headings where a medieval or gothic atmosphere is desirable. It can also support fantasy-oriented packaging, event materials, and game interfaces when used at moderate to large sizes to preserve the crisp interior details.
The overall tone is medieval and ceremonial, with a slightly mysterious, arcane flavor typical of gothic display lettering. Its sharp geometry and broken strokes evoke manuscripts, heraldry, and fantasy world-building, leaning more dramatic than friendly. The texture reads as crafted and historical rather than modern or neutral.
The design appears intended to provide a legible, streamlined take on blackletter-inspired forms while keeping a hand-drawn, cut-stroke character. Its emphasis on angular construction, spurred terminals, and patterned texture suggests a focus on evocative theming and recognizable historical flavor in display settings.
Distinctive spurs and wedge terminals help define word shape, especially in capitals, while the numerals mirror the same angular, cut-stroke logic. The sample text shows a strong horizontal texture with prominent verticals and frequent sharp corners; this produces a lively, patterned color that suits short runs better than dense reading.