Blackletter Yeba 4 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, album art, game titles, event flyers, rowdy, medieval, spooky, rebellious, cartoonish, thematic display, vintage poster, horror fun, hand-cut texture, impact, chunky, jagged, angular, faceted, wedge serifs.
A chunky, faceted display face with irregular, hand-cut contours and pronounced angular joins. Strokes are extremely heavy with medium contrast created by sharp notches, chiseled corners, and wedge-like terminals rather than smooth modulation. Letterforms lean on squared bowls and pinched counters, giving a carved, blocky silhouette; spacing feels uneven by design, reinforcing a handmade rhythm. The lowercase is compact and stout, with short extenders and simplified blackletter-like construction, while numerals share the same chunky, cut-paper geometry.
Best suited to short, large-size settings where its rugged outlines and heavy mass can be appreciated—such as posters, headlines, album/merch graphics, game or entertainment titles, and themed event flyers. It works well when you want loud texture and a strong silhouette rather than quiet readability in long passages.
The overall tone is raucous and theatrical—part medieval poster, part spooky novelty. Its jagged edges and lumpy, hand-drawn rhythm convey mischief and attitude, reading as bold, brash, and slightly chaotic rather than refined or formal.
The design appears intended to evoke a handmade, carved blackletter flavor with a bold, playful edge—prioritizing dramatic shapes and textured rhythm for attention-grabbing display use. Its irregular facets suggest an intentionally cut-from-paper or chiseled aesthetic aimed at high-impact, theme-forward typography.
In text, the dense silhouettes create strong texture and a dark color on the page; counters can close up at smaller sizes, and the irregular edges become the main identifying feature. The font’s visual personality comes from consistent chisel-like nicks and asymmetric shaping across glyphs, producing an intentionally rough, cut-out look.