Blackletter Fima 15 is a bold, normal width, very high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, titles, logos, packaging, headlines, medieval, dramatic, ceremonial, gothic, aggressive, historic tone, display impact, gothic branding, engraved feel, calligraphic nod, angular, fractured, spurred, faceted, chiseled.
A slanted, blackletter-style design built from sharp, faceted strokes and tight interior counters. Forms are constructed with broken curves and abrupt angles, producing a cut-metal, chiseled look with pronounced spurs and wedge-like terminals. Vertical emphasis dominates, while bowls and joins show segmented, geometric handling that creates a rhythmic, jagged texture across words. Capitals are narrow and tall with strong diagonal cuts, and the figures echo the same fractured construction for a cohesive set.
Best suited for short-form display work where its angular texture can be appreciated—titles, posters, album or game branding, beer or spirits labels, and identity marks. It can also work for certificates or event collateral when a traditional, gothic flavor is desired, but it is less appropriate for long paragraphs or small sizes where the dense rhythm may reduce legibility.
The font conveys a medieval, ceremonial tone with a hard-edged intensity. Its sharp joins and spurred terminals give it a forceful, dramatic voice suited to heraldic, historical, or fantasy-leaning aesthetics rather than casual reading.
Likely drawn to evoke traditional blackletter calligraphy while emphasizing a sharper, more faceted, almost engraved silhouette. The goal appears to be a high-impact display face that reads as historical and authoritative, with consistent construction across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
Word shapes become highly textured in running lines, with strong letter-to-letter patterning typical of blackletter. The italic slant adds forward motion and urgency, and the dense stroke pattern can visually darken quickly as line length increases.