font_foundry: Jeff Levine
Unadorned JNL is the stripped down version of 2011’s Troubador JNL; an ornate wood type font. With the inner ornamentation removed, this Western-influenced type design takes on a bolder look, yet retains its Victorian...
First Responder JNL is a back slanted version of Catalog JNL, and is intended to be used for graphics on police and fire vehicles to emulate “forward” movement, which is a popular theme on...
This is a digital reinterpretation of Walter Huxley’s 1935 evergreen “Huxley Vertical”, which was originally cast for American Type Founders. A timeless classic which has been in use since the Art Deco era, this...
Scandals JNL is free-form hand lettering with an Art Nouveau influence showing up on a 1928 piece of sheet music for the song “American Tune”, and is based on the cover text noting the...
Novelty songs and their often crazy or extra-long titles were all the rage at the beginning of the 20th century. A piece of sheet music for the 1920 song “When Chu-Ching-San weds Paddy McCann”...
Pen Gothic JNL emulates lettering made with a round nib lettering pen, and is loosely based on some text found on the popular 1918 song “Ja-Da”. The font is available in regular and oblique...
Although the early 1900s through the 1920s seemed to be the “Golden Age” of ridiculously long novelty song titles, it appears that even the decade of the 1940s had its fair share as well....
Pen Nouveau JNL is a perfect example of the fluid, free-form pen lettering popularized during the Art Nouveau era of the early 1900s. The type face was modeled from the lettering on the cover...
Sheet music for the title song from the 1933 Jean Harlow-Clark Gable film “Hold Your Man” has the movie title hand lettered in a dual line sans serif with Art Deco influences. This is...
A piece of sheet music from Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II’s 1958 hit “Flower Drum Song” had the play’s name lettered in its iconic Anglo-Japanese style. This became the basis for Rice Wine...