Blackletter Jely 14 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, packaging, certificates, gothic, medieval, heraldic, dramatic, ceremonial, historic feel, ornamental display, authority, thematic branding, traditional craft, angular, broken, calligraphic, spurred, blackletter.
A sharply broken, calligraphy-driven blackletter with angular joins, pointed terminals, and pronounced wedge-like spurs. Strokes show controlled modulation with crisp cut-ins and occasional curved bowls, creating a lively rhythm that alternates between rigid verticality and sweeping diagonals. Capitals are ornate and compact, with strong internal shapes and asymmetrical flourishes, while the lowercase keeps a tight, vertical texture with short extenders and clear pen-made facets. Numerals match the style with similarly carved forms and emphatic hooks and wedges.
Best suited to display settings where its intricate broken forms can be appreciated: posters, headlines, mastheads, and logo wordmarks. It also fits themed packaging, labels, invitations, and certificate-style applications where a traditional, authoritative tone is desired. For longer passages, it works most comfortably at larger sizes with generous spacing to preserve clarity.
The font communicates a traditional Gothic tone with a ceremonial, historical character. Its dense texture and sharp edges feel authoritative and theatrical, evoking manuscripts, heraldry, and old-world signage. The overall mood is formal and emphatic rather than casual.
The letterforms appear intended to recreate a classic blackletter look with crisp pen-cut edges and ornamental capitals, balancing dense vertical texture with enough curvature to remain legible in short phrases. Its design prioritizes historic atmosphere and visual impact over neutrality, making it a strong choice for themed and statement typography.
The design maintains consistent blackletter logic across cases, with especially distinctive, stylized capitals and compact lowercase spacing that reads as a dark, patterned color in lines of text. Curved letters like O and Q retain a carved, segmented feel, helping the face stay cohesive even in round forms.