Serif Forked/Spurred Idme 1 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, branding, book covers, vintage, assertive, dramatic, editorial, western, display impact, vintage tone, dramatic emphasis, compact setting, spurred, bracketed, high-shouldered, condensed, angular.
A condensed serif with a pronounced rightward slant and compact proportions. Strokes are weighty with moderate contrast, and many terminals resolve into sharp, forked spurs and small wedge-like hooks, giving stems a carved, ornamental finish. Serifs are bracketing and slightly flared rather than slabby, and curves are tightened into angular, pinched joins that create a lively, faceted rhythm. Counters are relatively small and the overall color is dense, helping the face hold together at display sizes while maintaining clear, consistent letterforms across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited to headlines and short display settings where its condensed width and decorative spurs can read as intentional character rather than noise. It fits poster titling, packaging labels, branding marks, and book-cover typography that benefits from a vintage or dramatic voice. It can work for short emphatic lines in editorial layouts, especially when generous tracking and leading are available.
The font projects a bold, old-world energy with a poster-like urgency. Its spurred terminals and condensed, slanted stance evoke vintage printing—equal parts frontier drama and editorial punch—making it feel emphatic, charismatic, and a bit theatrical.
The design appears intended to deliver a compact, high-impact serif with an italicized forward motion and distinctive forked terminals. Its goal seems to be maximizing personality and presence in display typography while keeping letterforms structured and repeatable for consistent headline texture.
In text samples, the strong internal rhythm from repeated spurs and angled joins creates a distinctive texture, especially in sequences with vertical stems (n, m, h) and diagonals (v, w, x). Numerals follow the same condensed, slanted construction, keeping signage and headline compositions visually cohesive.