Serif Other Vuli 10 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, game titles, album covers, brand marks, headlines, gothic, medieval, occult, dramatic, heraldic, dramatic display, gothic revival, atmospheric branding, carved look, title emphasis, blackletter-inflected, angular, flared, incised, spiky.
A decorative serif with a blackletter-leaning construction: letters are built from rigid vertical stems and boxy bowls, with sharp, triangular notches and wedge-like terminals that read as flared serifs. Curves are reduced into squared-off counters and stepped joins, creating a chiseled, stencil-like rhythm in both capitals and lowercase. The lowercase shows narrow, upright stems with intermittent pointed spurs and compact apertures; capitals feel monolithic and architectural, with strong horizontals and abruptly cut internal spaces. Numerals follow the same angular logic with squared counters and emphatic terminals, keeping a consistent, tightly engineered texture across the set.
Best suited to display work where its angular, blackletter-inflected details can read clearly—such as posters, game or film titles, album artwork, event branding, and logo/wordmark concepts. It can also work for short, impactful headlines or pull quotes, but extended body copy may feel dense due to the tight texture and ornate terminals.
The overall tone is dark and ceremonial, evoking medieval signage, Gothic titling, and occult or fantasy aesthetics. Its sharp notches and heavy, carved presence give it a forceful, theatrical voice that feels authoritative and slightly menacing rather than friendly or casual.
The design appears intended as a contemporary decorative serif that borrows the structural severity of blackletter and the feel of carved lettering, translating those cues into a consistent, geometric display face. Its emphasis on notches, wedges, and squared counters prioritizes atmosphere and identity over neutrality.
In text settings the dense vertical rhythm and frequent spurs create a strong pattern that can become visually busy at small sizes, while larger sizes highlight the distinctive cut-ins and wedge terminals. The design favors straight-sided geometry over calligraphic modulation, producing a hard-edged, crafted look.