Earthpass 20XX – A project by Sibylle Hornung In collaboration with Typeworld.xyz

Earthpass 20XX invites the reimagination and speculation of the world.
20XX indicates that this concept is a wishful dream for this century.
This luminescent keychain is made of laser-cut acrylic and reminds of official identity documents.
Earthpass 20XX believes that no one should be excluded by its gender, race, ability, or anything other, and expects these values from its holders.
“NO GENDERS. NO BORDERS.”
As the world seems filled with horrific news every day, this seems like a far-away utopia of a speculative, yet hopeful future.
The team of Earthpass 20XX donates its profits to Ukrainian Refugee Aid and Free Palestine.

(Photography: Elisabeth Thoma, Product Shoot: Sibylle Hornung, 3D

Type Cast

John Pobojewski — Concept, Design Direction, Animation, Audio
Zach Minnich — 3D, Animation
Leah Wendzinski — Animation, Cinematography
Alyssa Arnesen — Design
Nick Adam — Typeface Design

Type Cast is a short digital play performed as a constructed dialogue between two individuals, each wearing typographic clothing in conversation with each other.

Conceived and directed by John Pobojewski, the piece explores the relationship between letters, personality, emotion, and stereotype. Throughout the dialogue, the two actors challenge each others’ expectations, and begin to lose faith in their mental image of what each other stands for — both for the good and for the bad.

Common.otf meta-hybrid typeface

OpenType technology allows for multiple variations of the same glyph to be embedded in one font and then displayed semi-randomly when typeset with Contextual Alternates active. What happens when these variations are from commonly available typefaces that are similar yet different – such as the four common san serifs: Akzidenz Grotesk, Helvetica, Arial, and Univers? How do the subtle variations in the visual characteristics of each typeface scan when bodies of text are set in this mix of glyphs? Do the hybrid font and the derived typography reveal the differences and similarities of the original typefaces? And what are the copyright implications? For more info: ianmitchell.online/common

Boom — Tish

A Bilingual typographic visualization of the sound of Rocks “Booming” and Water “Splashing.” With the word BOOM being the sound of rocks crashing in English and the word TISH (تش) being the sound of water splashing in Arabic, the letting and composition explore the different dimensions of these Bi-Scriptural and Bilingual contrasting sounds and words through organic forms, 2D, 3D and Motion.

QanikType: order and Chaos of a typeface

Qanik type is an ever-changing font design project. It was born to combine order with chaos.
Geometric and archaic glyphs of different manufactures change as you write. The order is identified in the design that composes the letters with simple and modular, but almost never parallel lines. The shapes of the letters are inspired by rock carvings.
The chaos is given by the almost random alternation of the weight of the letters. Qanik means “snow in the air” in the Inuit language. The QanikType Snow variant is like a snow storm and you don’t understand what you write.

Serendipity

We are used to conceiving typography as a visual system made of two-dimensional black shapes and this both on paper and screen. Recent technologies make it possible to easily act on this two-dimensionality by forcing the very concept of writing in favor of a more expressive and experimental approach to the typographic form. it is therefore more and more common to see letters move in space, deform, change color, become 3D. Serendipity is an animated poster generated from 2D letters. Like vases made on a lathe, the letters rotate on themselves, creating solids with pure shapes, almost anthropomorphic sculptures. Typography thus becomes a three-dimensional object with new formal connotations.

Panic Pile

My practice is about abandoning control and accepting the uncontrollable. My poster is a word cloud of obsessions that includes unwanted thoughts, urges, worries, and doubts. It’s from different analog methods of chance and unpredictability (IE., soapy paint bubbles, pastel dust, collage, or shaving cream with food coloring).

Pexi Pexi

Pexi pexi is an experimental tool where the user can create shapes thus type on a grid with basic modules like squares and circles but also emoji and reform the grid axis stretching the modules. The idea started from my intention to learn somehow code but also from the ability of code to create interaction with the user.

Kinetic letters

Kinetic letters is an ongoing study and experimentation upon the movement of type along time. How type can be more expressive and have a character by moving but also how type can change form, along the time sequence. The particular letters are also part of the 36days of type challenge for this year, a challenge that its purpose is to experiment and push further what we consider type.

LetterOne Typeface

The LetterOne has its origins as a stencil font that allows one to draw each letter and each digit with only one stencil. The resulting font was digitalised and then converted into a modular letter system for letterpress printing. For this purpose, the stencil was produced as a mould into which six different acrylic-glass elements can be inserted. This system is also modular in the sense that several of these modules can be combined to form extended or condensed typefaces. LetterOne thus takes the path from an analogue stencil font via a modern font for digital use back to the analogue, historical technique of letterpress printing.

A Rebel City in Motion

My interest in experimental type design lent itself perfectly to a project I recently did for Nottingham Light Night 2022 where the city was lit up across two days, showcasing various light-based projects. My project, ’A Rebel City in Motion,’ came to life as a projected piece, exploring the rebellious spirit of the city through type and animation. By playing with form, colour, texture and legibility, my project sought to challenge the way we perceive information in a dynamic and rebellious way. The project brought together type and animation which are two important components of my work and the type itself spelt out different positive associations relating to the theme of being a rebel.

see below

»fighting for the truth«
80cm x 80cm
acrylic, dispersion paint & thread on canvas, framed
©2022

»how quickly things can change II«
30cm x 50cm
acrylic & dispersion paint on canvas, framed
©2021

»pretending«
50cm x 50cm
acrylic & dispersion paint on canvas, stitched, framed
© 2020

»very well«
30cm x 50cm
acrylic on canvas, stitched
© 2017

Series de Collages tipográficos

Series de collages tipográficos que alteran la posibilidad de lectura del texto. La forma tipográfica oculta su lectura en la visualidad de las figuras. El material base, rescatado de una bolsa de la tienda Forever 21, de pruebas de impresión, y de restos de afiches callejeros, dan nombres a las series y dejan mínimas evidencias de la función lingüística del texto. Los nombres de las series son: “fore-VER”, “M y R en negro y rojo”, y “Punto”.

Flora Typographica

The work is a typographic interpretation of the Red List of Threatened Plant Species of Germany. The topic of preserving biodiversity is not approached rationally, but through intuition and sensuality. First there was the idea that writing systems and plants have one thing in common: a limited set of characters or shapes. By repeating and assembling the individual parts, an infinite variety of compositions is created. Starting from an original shape – an oval, seven shape alphabets were constructed. Accordingly each of the seven groups of plants has a set of 26 figures – the components of its own language. Using these, the botanical names of 168 plants were set into abstract images.

Autre Display

Versatile and expressive, Autre Display is a contemporary two-axis variable typeface that offers full control over its serifs and oblique angle. Its meticulously crafted high contrast shapes, countless stylistic alternates and the ability to manually open or close its counters allow it to be used at any size and therefore make it a perfect fit for logotypes, visual identities or editorial projects.

Autre Display was designed by Christian Gruber and is the first part of the Autre type family which is currently under development.

Ally

Ally is an expressive but delicate typeface that pushes the boundaries of legibility. Its unconventional shapes emerged from calligraphic experiments with the attempt to design characters with only one stroke and only curves. Ally was initially conceived for display situations and short texts but can also evoke interesting textures in smaller sizes and longer texts. It provides a playground for distinctive and vigorous typography.

ARTIFICIAL SCRIPT

The Bachelor-Thesis ARTIFICIAL SCRIPT comprises the experimental creation of a potential universal alphabetic script using applied AI. It explores an innovative design approach in order to generate a unique writing system based on a deep-learning generative model. This new alphabetic script is composed out of the Armenian, Cyrillic, Georgian, Greek, and Latin script by making the basic letters comparable and using these as input data. Overall resulting in 64 artificially generated characters and corresponding human-made letter-skeletons, which are built upon a modular system. The ARTIFICIAL SCRIPT can be read across languages, whereas the meaning of the content remains language-dependent.

Tillmono C

Tillmono C is a modular skeleton-based display font in three different styles. It combines both aspects of nature and technique as the letter-skeletons were constructed out of 7 modules derived from the plant Tillandsia capitata. The three contour styles were selected from a set of 39 styles created by applying the scatter brush tool in Adobe Illustrator onto the very same skeleton.

VIRA-LATA

Crossing references from the act of travelling as from the railway world, the concept for the interactive facades of this public staircase next to Porto’s central train station, which also poses as a “communication tower”, derives from the informative screens in the stations that display the departures and arrivals.
By using a system of two different colours – the yellow found in the train carriages and the natural metal colour of the tin cans – the possibility to create original and personal messages and images – by turning each can as if in a massive analogical pixel screen -, is offered to the users who would like to actively participate in the constant mutation of the square’s image.

More & More Thoughts

More & More Thoughts is a poster about overthinking.
It visualizes the constant flow of incoming thoughts, which at some point only leads to confusion, feeling overwhelmed and headaches.
The animation triggers these feelings in the viewer and creates interesting distortions of the typography.

Cognitive Distortions Type – Thinking Mistakes We Make Everyday Vol 2

Thinking mistakes known as cognitive distortions are irrational thoughts and beliefs that are not based on facts. In other words, these are your mind convincing you to believe negative things about yourself and your world that are not necessarily true. It can be damaging to our mental health. Cognitive distortions type is a display font with different variants in, inspired by thought errors which we frequently encounter in daily life. Letters are based on basic geometric forms such as square, triangle and octagon, taking as reference features of distorted thinking.The letters a,b,d,e,h,m,n,o,r,t vary according to distinctive features of 10 common distorted thinking patterns.

Fabric N

The letter was made for a zine called alphabet of home office, where the goal was to create a letter with an experimental approach. For this letter I explored the material of fabrics to create a form which is influenced by the material itself.