Serif Other Ubfe 7 is a regular weight, very narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, album covers, game titles, gothic, medieval, occult, heraldic, dramatic, period atmosphere, display impact, heritage tone, decorative texture, engraved look, blackletter, angular, pointed, faceted, high-contrast forms.
A condensed, angular display face with blackletter-adjacent construction and crisp, faceted terminals. Strokes stay largely even in thickness, with sharp diagonal cuts, pointed joins, and small wedge-like serifs that create a chiseled, architectural rhythm. Counters are narrow and rectangular, and many curves are resolved into straight segments, giving letters a rigid, vertical emphasis. The lowercase mirrors the uppercase’s fractured geometry, with compact bowls and tight apertures that prioritize silhouette over open readability.
Best suited to short display settings where the condensed width and pointed detailing can read as deliberate style—posters, packaging, album artwork, game/film titles, and logo or wordmark work. It can also serve for section headers or pull quotes when paired with a simpler text face for body copy.
The overall tone is gothic and ceremonial, evoking manuscripts, metal engraving, and heraldic signage. Its sharp corners and disciplined verticality feel stern, dramatic, and slightly arcane, lending an old-world or fantasy flavor to titles and branding.
The design appears intended to translate blackletter and engraved-letter traditions into a clean, consistent, contemporary outline with strict vertical structure. It emphasizes presence and period atmosphere over text-page comfort, aiming for strong silhouettes and a recognizable gothic voice in compact widths.
Spacing appears tight by nature of the narrow proportions, producing strong texture in lines of text. Numerals and capitals read particularly sign-like, while the lowercase maintains the same angular vocabulary for consistent color in mixed-case settings.