Serif Forked/Spurred Ofju 2 is a bold, very narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, packaging, event titles, victorian, western, circus, retro, dramatic, ornamental impact, vintage signage, compact headlines, theatrical display, brand character, condensed, flared, spurred, tuscan-like, tight tracking.
A condensed serif with a strong vertical stance and a compact, tightly paced rhythm. Strokes are robust and largely even in weight, with minimal contrast, and the ends of stems and arms often flare into forked, spurred terminals that give the outlines a decorative, engraved feel. Counters are relatively narrow and vertical, and the overall silhouette is tall and compressed, producing high impact in short lines. The lowercase keeps a straightforward structure with sturdy stems and small, bracketed details, while the numerals match the condensed proportions and maintain the same ornamental finishing.
Best suited to display applications such as posters, editorial headlines, festival or event titling, saloon/circus-inspired branding, and packaging labels where a vintage ornamental voice is desired. It can work for short subheads or pull quotes, but extended small-size setting will likely feel dense due to the condensed proportions and decorative terminals.
The font projects a show-poster sensibility with a period flavor—part Victorian display, part frontier/Western signage. Its spurred terminals and tight proportions create a theatrical, attention-grabbing tone that feels suited to headlines and branded statements rather than neutral text.
Designed to deliver a compact, high-impact display look that evokes historic wood-type and engraved signage traditions. The consistent stroke weight and ornamental, spurred endings appear intended to add character and theatricality without relying on high contrast.
The most distinctive identifying feature is the repeated use of forked/spurred endings and mid-stem accents that create a slightly prickly texture along straight strokes. In paragraphs, the narrow counters and condensed widths amplify density, so spacing and line length will strongly influence readability.