Serif Forked/Spurred Myho 10 is a light, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: book typography, editorial text, literary titles, magazine layout, packaging, literary, traditional, formal, historic, scholarly, text tradition, editorial voice, added character, print classic, historic flavor, bracketed serifs, spurred terminals, oldstyle figures, calligraphic, lively rhythm.
This serif face presents softly bracketed serifs with distinctive forked and spurred terminals that give the strokes a slightly calligraphic finish. Curves are generously rounded and the joins feel organic, while verticals remain steady and clear, producing a classic book-serf silhouette with a lively surface texture. Uppercase forms are relatively open and measured, and the lowercase shows compact, readable counters with occasional flicks and small mid-stem nicks/spurs that add character. Numerals appear oldstyle in proportion, with varying heights and a traditional, text-friendly flow.
Well suited to long-form reading in books and essays where a traditional serif voice is desired, and it also performs nicely in editorial layouts that benefit from a bit of historical color. The spurred terminals make it particularly effective for literary titles, chapter heads, and branded copy that wants a classic, crafted impression.
The overall tone is bookish and traditional, with an antique, editorial warmth rather than a sharply modern precision. Decorative spur details add a subtle flourish that reads as cultured and slightly vintage, without becoming overtly ornamental.
The design appears intended to evoke a traditional text serif with added individuality through forked and spurred finishing details, balancing familiar proportions with a more characterful terminal treatment. It aims to feel at home in print-like contexts while offering enough distinctive texture to stand out in display sizes.
In running text the letterforms create a pronounced rhythm from the recurring spur and fork cues, which can enhance personality in headings and pull quotes. The italics are not shown; the roman alone already carries a gently expressive, print-classic voice.