1 / 5About Talking Machine JNL Font
The February 1920 issue of The Trader/The Canadian Jeweler carried an ad for the $15.00 Stewart Phonograph.
Under the logo for Stewart was the word “Phonograph” hand lettered with a round nib pen in an extra bold sans serif design with Art Nouveau influences.
This served as the model for Talking Machine JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.
in the early days of the phonograph, many people nicknamed it a “talking machine” because it faithfully reproduced the human voice via recordings.
How to Install Talking Machine JNL Font
Step-by-step instructions for every platform
- 1Download the Talking Machine JNL font file (.ttf or .otf).
- 2Locate the downloaded file in your Downloads folder.
- 3Right-click the font file.
- 4Select "Install" to install for the current user, or "Install for all users" to make it available system-wide.
- 5Talking Machine JNL is now available in Word, Photoshop, Illustrator, and all other apps.
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Browse all →What pairs well with Talking Machine JNL Font?
Talking Machine JNL Font is a display font that shines as a display or heading face. Pair it with a clean sans-serif or serif font for body text — the contrast creates a clear hierarchy while the two styles stay balanced and easy to read.















