Blackletter Yeba 7 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, album art, branding, stickers, medieval, rowdy, streetwise, retro, playful, display impact, gothic flavor, diy texture, attitude, chunky, angular, faceted, irregular, compressed counters.
A heavy, display-oriented blackletter with chunky, faceted strokes and deliberately uneven edges. Letterforms are built from broad vertical slabs and clipped, angular corners, with small, irregular counters and occasional notches that create a cut-paper or carved look. The rhythm is lively and slightly bouncy, with inconsistent widths and small baseline/shape quirks that reinforce a hand-drawn feel while keeping a generally upright stance. Numerals match the dense, blocky construction and maintain strong silhouette impact at large sizes.
Best suited to posters, headlines, packaging, and branding that needs a strong gothic flavor without looking formal. It also works well for album art, event flyers, merchandise, and sticker-style graphics where big silhouettes and punchy word shapes are more important than extended readability.
The font projects a loud, medieval-meets-poster attitude—part gothic heritage, part playful mischief. Its rugged geometry and exaggerated weight read as assertive and attention-seeking, with a DIY energy that feels at home in bold, character-driven settings.
The design appears intended to reinterpret blackletter through a bold, hand-cut, display lens—keeping the gothic structure while exaggerating weight and introducing irregular, chiseled edges for maximum personality and impact.
Because the interior spaces are tight and the outlines are highly angular, readability drops quickly at smaller sizes or in long passages; the strongest performance comes from short words, stacked lines, and high-contrast layouts. The irregularity across glyphs adds personality but makes the texture intentionally non-uniform.