Shadow Vevi 10 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, album art, gothic, medieval, dramatic, ornate, old-world, heritage look, high impact, dramatic tone, dimensional effect, blackletter, broken, angular, beveled, notched.
A blackletter-inspired display face with angular, broken strokes and sharply cut terminals. Letterforms are built from sturdy verticals and faceted diagonals, with consistent notches and wedge-like joins that create a chiseled, beveled impression. Many glyphs include interior cut-outs and small counters that read as carved openings rather than smooth bowls, and several strokes suggest an offset edge or secondary contour that reinforces a shadowed, dimensional look. Spacing is moderately tight and the overall rhythm is vertical and architectural, keeping forms legible at larger sizes while maintaining dense texture.
Best suited to display settings such as headlines, posters, album art, and branding where a Gothic or historical voice is desired. It can also work for packaging, event titles, chapter openers, and short pulls where the carved details and shadowed cut-outs can be appreciated at size.
The font evokes medieval manuscripts, Gothic signage, and metal-inspired identity work with a theatrical, ceremonial tone. Its hard angles and carved detailing convey authority and tradition, while the shadow-like interior treatment adds a slightly ominous, poster-ready intensity.
The design appears intended to reinterpret traditional blackletter forms with a more graphic, dimensional treatment. By combining fractured calligraphic structure with hollowed interior shapes and a subtle shadowed edge, it aims for high-impact display typography that feels historic yet intentionally stylized.
Capitals are more elaborate and emblematic, while the lowercase is simplified but retains the same fractured, calligraphic construction. Numerals follow the same faceted logic and feel suited to headings and labels rather than continuous reading, where the dense texture can become heavy.