Serif Forked/Spurred Idho 3 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, packaging, mastheads, gothic, medieval, ornate, dramatic, heraldic, historic tone, display impact, ornamental texture, brand signaling, blackletter, angular, spurred, forked, high-waisted.
A compact, blackletter-influenced display face built from tall, compressed proportions and strongly vertical stems. Forms are predominantly angular with chiseled joins, pointed arches, and frequent forked or spurred terminals that create a barbed silhouette. Strokes show restrained modulation, but the overall color is dark due to dense vertical rhythm and tight counters, especially in multi-stem letters. Uppercase construction is narrow and pillar-like, while lowercase maintains a high-waisted feel with sharp, bracketed feet and small, incisive notches.
Best suited for short, high-impact settings such as headlines, mastheads, titles, and logo wordmarks where its ornate terminals and blackletter flavor can be appreciated. It also fits thematic applications like heritage branding, craft beverage packaging, event promotion, or editorial display that aims for a historic or ceremonial voice.
The font conveys a medieval, ceremonial tone with a stern, gothic presence. Its spurs and forked endings read as decorative and authoritative, suggesting tradition, ritual, and old-world craftsmanship. The overall impression is emphatic and theatrical rather than conversational.
The design appears intended to modernize blackletter conventions into a bold, highly condensed display style, emphasizing a consistent vertical rhythm and distinctive forked/spurred terminals for immediate recognizability. It prioritizes dramatic texture and historical resonance over neutral readability in long text.
The compressed width and dense vertical repetition can cause letterforms such as m/n/u and some capitals to visually cluster at smaller sizes, while larger settings emphasize the striking terminal details. Numerals follow the same narrow, engraved logic, matching the angular texture of the alphabet.