Serif Other Ihko 5 is a bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, signage, brand marks, packaging, western, vintage, posterish, rugged, display, evocation, impact, heritage, sign feel, beaked serifs, bracketed, ink-trap like, angular, compact.
A bold, high-contrast serif with compact proportions and a strongly squared-off, angular construction. Strokes are mostly straight and planar, with occasional narrowing at joins that reads like subtle ink-trap shaping. Serifs are sharply beaked and often wedge-like, giving terminals a pointed, chiseled finish rather than a soft bracket. Counters are rectangular to slightly rounded-rect, and curves (as in C, G, S) feel tensioned and faceted rather than fully round, producing a dense, rhythmic texture in text.
Best suited to display sizes where the sharp terminals and faceted curves can read cleanly—posters, headlines, labels, and signage. It can work for short bursts of copy (taglines, pull quotes) when a vintage or frontier-inflected voice is desired, but its dense texture and distinctive serifs make it less ideal for extended small-size reading.
The design conveys a rugged, old-style display tone with a Western-leaning, woodtype-adjacent flavor. Its sharp serifs and compact stance create a confident, stamped look that feels historic and utilitarian rather than refined or literary.
The font appears designed to evoke a historical, industrial-meets-frontier aesthetic through angular geometry, beaked serifs, and compact spacing, prioritizing impact and character for display typography.
Uppercase forms are especially strong and architectural, while lowercase keeps the same angular logic with sturdy stems and squared bowls. Figures appear monolinear in feel with pronounced corners and crisp terminals, reinforcing a poster-oriented, sign-painting sensibility.