Blackletter Fili 6 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, titles, logotypes, headlines, packaging, gothic, dramatic, heraldic, ceremonial, historic, historic evocation, display impact, heraldic tone, engraved look, angular, faceted, spurred, wedge cut, calligraphic.
A stylized blackletter with sharply faceted bowls, prominent wedge terminals, and strong thick–thin modulation that reads like a broad-pen or chisel-cut construction. Strokes break into crisp, triangular joins and pointed spurs, giving many counters a carved, geometric feel rather than rounded continuity. Capitals are compact and emblematic with assertive diagonals and cut-in notches, while lowercase keeps a steady rhythm through dense verticals, narrow apertures, and distinctive hooked or blade-like endings. Numerals follow the same cut and flare logic, with angled stress and tapered entry/exit strokes that maintain the high-contrast, sculptural texture in text.
Best suited for display settings such as posters, album/film titles, event branding, and logo wordmarks where its dramatic texture can dominate the page. It can also work for short passages like pull quotes, certificates, labels, or thematic packaging when set with generous size and careful tracking.
The overall tone is medieval and ceremonial, projecting authority and tradition with a dramatic, high-contrast bite. Its sharp cuts and heavy black shapes create a bold, heraldic presence that feels suited to lore, ritual, and classic Gothic styling rather than everyday neutrality.
The font appears designed to evoke blackletter heritage through chiseled, angular forms and pronounced contrast, while keeping letterforms bold and graphic for modern display use. Its consistent wedge terminals and faceted curves suggest an intention to deliver a carved, emblematic voice that remains visually cohesive across the full alphanumeric set.
In running text the face forms a dark, patterned texture with frequent sharp interior corners and small apertures, so spacing and size will strongly affect legibility. The design’s consistent use of wedge cuts and faceted curves gives it a cohesive, engraved look across uppercase, lowercase, and figures.