Showing posts with label afterword jnl. Show all posts
Showing posts with label afterword jnl. Show all posts
Afterword JNL
Designed by Jeff Levine, Afterword JNL is an art deco font family. This typeface has two styles and was published by Jeff Levine Fonts.


At the end of the 1931 gangster film “The Public Enemy” a hand lettered card offers up an afterword on the demise of Tom Powers (James Cagney’s character in the film) and how a “public enemy” is neither a man nor a character but a problem society must deal with.

The text is in an Art-Deco influenced sans serif, and has been digitally recreated as Afterword JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.



Afterword JNL


Afterword JNL
Designed by Jeff Levine, Afterword JNL is an art deco font family. This typeface has two styles and was published by Jeff Levine Fonts.


At the end of the 1931 gangster film “The Public Enemy” a hand lettered card offers up an afterword on the demise of Tom Powers (James Cagney’s character in the film) and how a “public enemy” is neither a man nor a character but a problem society must deal with.

The text is in an Art-Deco influenced sans serif, and has been digitally recreated as Afterword JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.



Afterword JNL


Afterword JNL
Designed by Jeff Levine, Afterword JNL is an art deco font family. This typeface has two styles and was published by Jeff Levine Fonts.


At the end of the 1931 gangster film “The Public Enemy” a hand lettered card offers up an afterword on the demise of Tom Powers (James Cagney’s character in the film) and how a “public enemy” is neither a man nor a character but a problem society must deal with.

The text is in an Art-Deco influenced sans serif, and has been digitally recreated as Afterword JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.



Afterword JNL


Afterword JNL
Designed by Jeff Levine, Afterword JNL is an art deco font family. This typeface has two styles and was published by Jeff Levine Fonts.


At the end of the 1931 gangster film “The Public Enemy” a hand lettered card offers up an afterword on the demise of Tom Powers (James Cagney’s character in the film) and how a “public enemy” is neither a man nor a character but a problem society must deal with.

The text is in an Art-Deco influenced sans serif, and has been digitally recreated as Afterword JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.



Afterword JNL


Afterword JNL
Designed by Jeff Levine, Afterword JNL is an art deco font family. This typeface has two styles and was published by Jeff Levine Fonts.


At the end of the 1931 gangster film “The Public Enemy” a hand lettered card offers up an afterword on the demise of Tom Powers (James Cagney’s character in the film) and how a “public enemy” is neither a man nor a character but a problem society must deal with.

The text is in an Art-Deco influenced sans serif, and has been digitally recreated as Afterword JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.



Afterword JNL