font_designer: Jeff Levine

Sign Letterer JNL

Sign Letterer JNL font

Sign Letterer JNL is the serif version of the Art Deco hand-lettering of Sign Painter JNL—and inspired by original pen lettering found on an old decal catalog sheet from the late 1940s to the...

Vendor JNL

Vendor JNL font

Vendor JNL is Jeff Levine’s take on the popular ribbon font of the Victorian Era, but using a vertical type (Trade Journal JNL) rather than skewed letters. End caps for the ribbon can be...

Naroid Initials JNL

Naroid Initials JNL font

Naroid Initials JNL is one of the most ultra-compressed sets of initials available in digital type. These twenty-six initials are so narrow that a test print with all of the letters at 2-1/2 inches...

Paper Stencil JNL

Paper Stencil JNL font

Paper Stencil JNL is another addition to Jeff Levine’s ever-growing collection of stencil fonts based on vintage source material.

Diamond Jim JNL

Diamond Jim JNL font

Diamond Jim JNL was inspired [in part] by an image of a 1970s Letraset® dry transfer typeface made entirely of small stars. By creating his own layout using tiny diamond shapes, Jeff Levine has...

Genesee JNL

Genesee JNL font

Genesee JNL is a medium-bold sans serif inspired by the letter shapes of Jeff Levine’s Paper Stencil JNL, and named for the river valley that traverses Rochester, New York.

Midtown JNL

Midtown JNL font

The alphabet that inspired Midtown JNL was found on a page from an old ‘how to’ lettering book.

Corkboard JNL

Corkboard JNL font

Corkboard JNL is a bold, yet fun rounded-ends typeface that was popular in the 1970s and enjoying a revival amongst students and teachers via die-cut bulletin board letters. Five variations are offered—Regular, Slanted, Shadow,...

Crosstown JNL

Crosstown JNL font

Crosstown JNL is a serif treatment of Midtown JNL, an Art Deco typeface displayed in the pages of an old ‘how to’ lettering book.

Backpage Article JNL

Backpage Article JNL font

Backpage Article JNL and its oblique counterpart are a variant to the popular sanserif wood types used in newspaper headlines and on broadsheets in years past.