Serif Forked/Spurred Ofpe 5 is a bold, very narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, editorial, gothic, vintage, dramatic, authoritative, ornate, heritage tone, space-saving, display impact, ornamental detail, blackletter-leaning, spurred, forked, angular, condensed.
A condensed serif design with sturdy, low-contrast strokes and a strongly vertical build. Stems are straight and compact, with frequent forked/spurred terminals and small wedge-like serif cues that create a slightly blackletter-leaning, engraved rhythm without fully committing to broken strokes. Curves are restrained and often tightened into angular joins, giving counters a narrow, upright shape and producing a dense, even texture in lines of text. Capitals are tall and rigid, while lowercase retains a traditional structure with compact bowls and short apertures, keeping the overall silhouette crisp and controlled.
Best suited to display applications where a compact, high-impact texture is desirable—headlines, posters, logotypes, and branding systems that want a historic or gothic inflection. It can also work for short editorial titling or pull quotes, particularly when space is tight and a formal, ornamental tone is intended.
The font conveys a gothic, old-world formality with a commanding, poster-ready presence. Its spurred terminals and tight proportions add drama and ceremony, suggesting heritage, tradition, and a slightly theatrical edge rather than casual readability.
The design appears intended to deliver a condensed, authoritative serif voice with ornamental spurs that evoke historic lettering and blackletter-adjacent detail, while remaining structured enough for contemporary display typography.
The narrow set width and vertical emphasis create strong word-shapes and a dark typographic color, especially in mixed-case text. Numerals match the same condensed, upright character, and the consistent spur motif helps unify letters across the alphabet, contributing to a cohesive, emblematic look at display sizes.