Your Nation / Not Your Nation

Experimental project on the concept of identity and nation by means of typography. It expresses the necessity of diversity and coexistence, as from this can take origin new forms.
In the form of a book, the motto of all nations are collected shaped in new and different letterings. From their words (and flag’s colours) new ones are randomly generated. I used a generative automatic tool to mix words into new sentences, and designed a method to obtain new letters shapes, generated by the merge and overlap of the letters (and colors) belonging to the original motto. From here new glyphs are originated, always maintaining the legibility of the words.

Werner Gotesk

Werner Gotesk is a variable font interpolating between a textura master called Gotik and the sans-serif master Grotesk. The smooth process of changing forms can be set manually within six hundred intermediate steps. Because of the high variety of different shapes, it is the designers choice if the font is going to be more gothic, more modern or in between.
In the slow morphing of the forms one can see how curves build up or break step by step, how edges and corners emerge, how entire elements come out or disappear. Werner Gotesk gives designers the opportunity to revive largely forgotten typefaces, the broken scripts.

The same (sea)

This work consists of a generative system to design a lettering to express, through form, that: the sea which gives pleasure to who is on holiday (Sorrento) it is the same which gives pain to the refugees (Tripoli).
Through a generative process and programming are defined two different and opposite type deformation, starting from a common and neutral one.
The intention is to express the two different ways to experience the sea: the seriousness of the refugee and the care-freeness of the man on holiday.
The generative system implies that form and aesthetic derives from a specific rule/instruction. In that way it is reachable the objective formalization of that given rules.

Faltbuchstaben

I saw a crumpled piece of paper in my trash can. The wrinkled and deformed text on it served as an inspiration for me. Then i took the individual deformed letters, cut them out and placed them in the room as an three-dimensional object. Depending on the perspective and arrangement, the word is still legible.

Faltbuchstaben

I saw a crumpled piece of paper in my trash can. The wrinkled and deformed text on it served as an inspiration for me. Then i took the individual deformed letters, cut them out and placed them in the room as an three-dimensional object. Depending on the perspective and arrangement, the word is still legible.

Polysynthesis No. 1

Printed in December 2021 during his Exhibiting Artist Residency at IS Projects, David Wolske found inspiration for “Polysynthesis No. 1” ‘in the vibrant and abundant colors, textures, patterns, and personalities at IS Projects and in Fort Lauderdale.’ While the cropped numbers are characteristic of Wolske’s experimental letterpress work, the use of rounder shapes, fluorescent inks and a gradient (aka split-fountain or rainbow roll) are exciting new additions to the artist’s unique visual vocabulary. David did all of the letterpress printing by hand using the studio’s Vandercook SP-20 and wood type from the Selikoff Collection.

Flying objects

Flying objects is a collaborative project realised with Hansel Grotesque and it consists of two fabrics, a rug and a blanket. This project was born with the idea of translating the concept of motion design into static, physical objects.

In the rug trade, it is common to show the back of a carpet to indicate if it is handmade, as the weft threads reveal so. This act of turning the object over, revealing a different side, is a full-edged motion. Hence, the idea of playing with the front and the back of the fabrics, giving equal importance to these while designing.

Type torture tools

Burnier expresses his love for type while distorting, breaking, and beating letters. In these subversive experiments, type, readability, and any other design “rules” are pushed to their limits. These “type torture tools” began as exercises while Burnier was learning to program, but soon they became an expression of a frustrated type designer.

Linecan typeface

My font is based on writing with a flat pen. It is especially important for me to rely on real handwriting, a natural combination of contrasts when creating a font. I tried to make the linecan font modern, technological, but not too rough. It keeps in touch with classic fonts, but at the same time conveys the spirit of the 21st century.

Concaténations

Letters can be made by offsetting a skeleton path in a given direction and by a certain distance. This is similar to axonometry. As such, letter shapes can be seen as the projection of a sequence of paths into space. The animations play with this idea using two types of projection: axonometry and perspective. In the first animation the rotation angle of the axonometric projection is animated. This has the effect of making the illusion of space even more apparent. In the second one, the vanishing point is animated, as if it was following the mouvement of the eyes of the viewer. Similarly, any number of geometric operations on a path following a skeleton can be envisioned.

S

My project consists of experiments with letter shapes inspired by coding in Drawbot. All the posters are united by the idea of pushing boundaries of recognisability and emphasizing unique parts of letter constructions.

Diamond type

My project consists of experiments with letter shapes inspired by coding in Drawbot. All the posters are united by the idea of pushing boundaries of recognisability and emphasizing unique parts of letter constructions. Inspired by Diamond by Armin Haab. As seen by Lettera 2 by Armin Haab and Walter Hættenschweiler, 1961.