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  1. Personnel JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    The hand lettered title found on the 1938 sheet music for "I Haven't Changed a Thing" is a condensed Art Deco thick-and-thin sans serif with rounded corners. Reminiscent of office door and similar signage, this classic bit of lettering from the past is now available as Personnel JNL in both regular and oblique versions.
  2. Maybrook JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    One of the type examples found within the pages of “Lettering” by Harry B. Wright (1950) is a bold hand lettered serif typeface with a unique twist – the slab serifs had rounded corners, looking very much like show card lettering of the early 1900s. This design is now available digitally as Maybrook JNL, in both regular and oblique versions.
  3. Deco Pen JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Hand lettering found across the sheet music cover of 1931's "Bend Down, Sister" [from the Eddie Cantor film "Palmy Days"] covered a couple of varying Art Deco styles; both made with a round-tipped pen nib. Deco Pen JNL combines the best of both styles into one design that's available in both regular and oblique versions.
  4. Creampuff - 100% free
  5. Lemondrop - Personal use only
  6. Tellural - Personal use only
  7. Syntha - Personal use only
  8. Obti Sans - 100% free
  9. Aldo - Unknown license
  10. Neogrey - Personal use only
  11. Porky's - Personal use only
  12. AG Stencil - 100% free
  13. GARFIELD the CAT - Personal use only
  14. Pixochrome - Unknown license
  15. Continuum Light - Unknown license
  16. Mayonaise - Personal use only
  17. Spade - Unknown license
  18. Andrew Ward - 100% free
  19. Sucesion Slab - Personal use only
  20. Searider Falcon - Unknown license
  21. 11S01 Black Tuesday - Personal use only
  22. Gaitera Ball - Personal use only
  23. Hygiene - 100% free
  24. Birdman - Unknown license
  25. SF Technodelight - Unknown license
  26. 6th Aniversario - Personal use only
  27. WVelez Logofont - Unknown license
  28. Slukoni - 100% free
  29. Sporedom - Personal use only
  30. canstop - Unknown license
  31. Continuum Medium - Unknown license
  32. Sniglet - 100% free
  33. Tomorrow People - Unknown license
  34. FEAR Logo - Unknown license
  35. FF PQR Trial - Personal use only
  36. FF Mab - Personal use only
  37. Getboreg Slab - Personal use only
  38. Neue Haas Grotesk Display by Linotype, $33.99
    The first weights of Neue Haas Grotesk were designed in 1957-1958 by Max Miedinger for the Haas’sche Schriftgiesserei in Switzerland, with art direction by the company’s principal, Eduard Hoffmann. Neue Haas Grotesk was to be the answer to the British and German grotesques that had become hugely popular thanks to the success of functionalist Swiss typography. The typeface was soon revised and released as Helvetica by Linotype AG. As Neue Haas Grotesk had to be adapted to work on Linotype’s hot metal linecasters, Linotype Helvetica was in some ways a radically transformed version of the original. For instance, the matrices for Regular and Bold had to be of equal widths, and therefore the Bold was redrawn at a considerably narrower proportion. During the transition from metal to phototypesetting, Helvetica underwent additional modifications. In the 1980s Neue Helvetica was produced as a rationalized, standardized version. For Christian Schwartz, the assignment to design a digital revival of Neue Haas Grotesk was an occasion to set history straight. “Much of the warm personality of Miedinger’s shapes was lost along the way. So rather than trying to rethink Helvetica or improve on current digital versions, this was more of a restoration project: bringing Miedinger’s original Neue Haas Grotesk back to life with as much fidelity to his original shapes and spacing as possible (albeit with the addition of kerning, an expensive luxury in handset type).” Schwartz’s revival was originally commissioned in 2004 by Mark Porter for the redesign of The Guardian, but not used. Schwartz completed the family in 2010 for Richard Turley at Bloomberg Businessweek. Its thinnest weight was designed by Berton Hasebe.
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