Parking Lot Sale JNL


Here’s a novelty font emulating the plastic pennant streamers that were popular in the 1950s and 1960s used to decorate a store parking lot or used car lot for a sales event.


The typeface inside the individual pennants is Manufacturer JNL, which can be used for body copy associated with titles made by this font.


Parking Lot Sale JNL is available in regular (black letters on white pennants) and black (with white letters). A blank pennant for word spacing or end caps is available on the backslash key.



Parking Lot Sale JNL


Courtroom JNL


Erle Stanley Gardner’s beloved lawyer “Perry Mason” first appeared on screen in a series of six films with Warren Williams starring in four of them. The hand lettered opening title for 1935’s “The Case of the Lucky Legs” is a classic Art Deco sans serif design, and is now available as Courtroom JNL in both regular and oblique versions.



Courtroom JNL


Pleasant Show Card JNL


A beautiful and stylish pen lettered alphabet appears within the pages of the 1921 publication “How to Write Show Cards” and its Art Nouveau stylings made it a perfect candidate for a digital revival.


Pleasant Show Card JNL is available in both regular and oblique versions.



Pleasant Show Card JNL


Stocks and Bonds JNL


The hand lettered opening title for the 1935 movie “Thanks a Million” is rendered in a condensed, thick and thin Art Deco sans serif design.


It is now available as the digital typeface Stocks and Bonds JNL – in both regular and oblique versions.



Stocks and Bonds JNL


Revelry Deco JNL


The namesake for this type design was the dust jacket for the 1926 book “Revelry”.


A classic Art Deco thick-and-thin design, Revelry Deco JNL is available in both regular and oblique versions.



Revelry Deco JNL


Fun Time Nouveau JNL


“One Hundred Alphabets for the Show Card Writer” was published in 1919 to afford sign artists the ability to create signs and show cards in then-contemporary lettering styles.


One such alphabet was big, bold and representative of the Art Nouveau stylings popular in the early part of the 20th Century. Most likely it was applied to store sales and public events that were casual and informal, for its letter forms are free of any constraints.


This design is now available as Fun Time Nouveau JNL in both regular and oblique versions.



Fun Time Nouveau JNL


Eutaw Stencil JNL


A hand lettered emulation of a Roman stencil type face on the cover of the folio for the Stenso School Set was the basis for Eutaw Stencil JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.


The Stenso School Set (circa 1940-41) was comprised of three stencils – two lettering guides and a map of the [then] 48 United States.


Developed and patented by Baltimore school teacher Ruth Libauer Hormats, her stencils were the first to offer a system for accurate letter spacing and ease of use.


“Eutaw” (as part of the font’s name) is taken from Eutaw Place, the street where Ruth and her husband lived at the time of Stenso’s inception. To the Cherokee, the name means “Creek Indian”.



Eutaw Stencil JNL