Spiked Letter Shapes
Create sharp, thorned characters that mimic the aggressive strokes found in classic black metal logo design.
Forge dark, aggressive metal-inspired Unicode text styles and copy them instantly for profiles, posts, names, and designs.
Transform plain text into jagged, occult-inspired lettering suited for band logos, posters, merch concepts, and dark visual identities.
Create sharp, thorned characters that mimic the aggressive strokes found in classic black metal logo design.
Generate text that feels suitable for band marks, album titles, gig flyers, and underground scene artwork.
Turn ordinary words into high-contrast metal typography without manually sketching each chaotic stroke.
Match horror, frost, ritual, forest, corpsepaint, and extreme metal aesthetics with text that looks severe.
Explore heavier or cleaner versions so the final text can stay dramatic while remaining usable in real layouts.
Build striking names for demo tapes, zines, playlist covers, stage visuals, and social media graphics.
Use the generator to speed up visual exploration while preserving the hostile, handmade energy of extreme metal lettering.
Preview how a name could look before committing to a final drawn logo or commissioned artwork.
Test harsh typography against album covers, cassette inserts, shirt graphics, and digital release art.
Compare multiple wordmarks quickly to find the right balance of menace, symmetry, and legibility.
Check whether a phrase feels balanced enough for centered layouts, banners, patches, and mastheads.
Shape early designs for shirts, hoodies, stickers, patches, and limited-run underground merchandise.
Keep typography aligned with black metal’s visual language instead of using generic gothic lettering.
Review dense strokes, sharp terminals, and negative space before placing the text into a finished design.
Reuse a chosen visual direction across releases, profiles, event art, and promotional assets.
Use black metal lettering when a project needs menace, mysticism, underground credibility, and a deliberately extreme typographic voice.
Make gig announcements and festival posters feel darker, louder, and more aligned with extreme music culture.
Create titles for interviews, reviews, scene reports, and independent print layouts with a raw metal edge.
Support album, EP, split, demo, and compilation visuals with lettering that feels intentionally severe.
Style usernames, captions, thumbnails, banners, and announcements with a sharper visual identity.
Mock up compact lettering for back patches, woven labels, badges, and DIY apparel concepts.
Generate fast directions for designers, artists, and musicians before refining a final custom wordmark.