Blackletter Irba 15 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, book covers, game titles, packaging, medieval, hand-cut, dramatic, historic, storybook, thematic display, historic revival, fantasy tone, handcrafted look, angular, faceted, broken strokes, wedge serifs, chiseled terminals.
This design uses a blackletter-derived skeleton with faceted, angular strokes and frequent breaks between stems and arms, creating a hand-cut, chiseled look. Terminals are typically wedge-like and pointed, with sharp corners and flattened diagonals that suggest a pen held at a consistent angle or a carved sign style. Curves are minimized in favor of polygonal bowls and octagonal counters (notably in rounded capitals and figures), producing a crisp, rhythmic texture. Overall spacing and proportions vary slightly from glyph to glyph, reinforcing a crafted, irregular cadence while remaining legible in short passages.
It performs best in display contexts such as posters, book or album covers, game and film titles, and themed packaging where a historic or fantasy tone is desired. Short paragraphs are readable at moderate sizes, but the high-detail, angular texture is most impactful in headings and pull quotes.
The font evokes medieval manuscript lettering and fantasy title typography, with a bold, ceremonial presence. Its sharp geometry and broken strokes add tension and drama, reading as historic, arcane, and slightly theatrical rather than neutral or modern.
The likely intention is to reinterpret blackletter through a hand-rendered, carved geometry, balancing ornamented medieval cues with clear, sturdy letterforms for modern display use.
Capitals are tall and emphatic, while lowercase forms keep a compact, sturdy build with distinctive blackletter cues such as narrow joins and pointed arches. Numerals follow the same faceted construction, giving dates and headings a cohesive, period-flavored voice.