“(de)form” is a form specimen exploring what a type-specimen–like collection would look like if made entirely of hand-drawn, abstract shapes instead of letters. Each shape is hand-drawn, scanned, and placed across pages, forming a system where shapes can be individually referenced and compared. Variations in paper and ink add subtle differences, while the ring binding allows pages to be displayed on a wall. The work experiments with the relationship and boundaries between letters and shapes.
Silent Growth Series
“Silent Growth Series” explores how typography behaves when released from control. Using the Physarum Tool by Maxence Duterne, Carlota allows letterforms to grow and reorganize within a generative, organism-inspired system. The project results in quiet, organic compositions that reveal how form can emerge when intention steps aside.
CAMBRIAN
Cambrian, refers to the Cambrian era from the Paleozoic Period. It marks a pivotal point in Earth’s history where life rapidly diversified and complex ecosystems began to form, laying the foundation for the future evolution of life on the planet. The display font takes its inspiration from the forms of life during that time, mimicking the diverse alien-like forms.
Vanguard
Vanguard is a project inspired by the anti-gentrification protest. It serves as a visual statement, amplifying the voices of those affected by gentrification and demanding that gentrifiers take notice. The design draws from the historical use of wrought iron gates, symbols of wealth, protection, and stability, but reinterprets them as tools of protest. In doing so, it reclaims these elements, transforming them from symbols of exclusion to ones of resistance and community empowerment.
50 Years
Poster designed for the 50th anniversary of Bursa Uludag University.
In Pieces
Poster design for the exhibition ‘In Pieces’, curated by Neriman Polat and featuring the artworks of Hilal Balcı, Defne Parman and Doğa Çal, held at Merdiven ArtSpace in Istanbul, Türkiye from 7 May to 8 June 2024.
Echoes of Kathmandu Valley Catalog Design
I designed this catalog for the Echoes of Kathmandu Valley show at the Waterloo Center for the Arts, featuring 100 watercolor and ink paintings of traditional Newa architecture. The design balances clean typography with the expressive use of the Ranjana script, an authentic Newa script, woven subtly into the layout. This integration creates a visual rhythm that echoes the cultural depth of the Kathmandu Valley, making the catalog both a keepsake and an extension of the exhibition experience.
Kharkiv Vibes
Kharkiv vibes inspired by Mirror Stream (Dzerkal’nyy Strumin’) fountain.
Die Wundersamen Welten des Terry Gilliam und der Monty Python
“The Wondrous Worlds of Terry Gilliam and Monty Python”
Film poster for the Xenix cinema in Zurich
Abschlusspräsentationen Hochschule Luzern Design & Kunst
Final presentations Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts Design & Art
100 Years Michelin Building
Client Michelin House London (UK).
Poster for the 100th anniversary of the Michelin House in London.
The entire poster was designed using the tyre tracks of Michelin tyres.
Apparition
Poster for a book by Sandra de Matos, Illustrator from France.
Poster that also functions as book cover.
Palindromes in Motion: Typographic Experimentation in Time and Space
In this project, I explored writing within a precise three-dimensional grid in a flat digital space, incorporating time. With Korean animator Choi Gunhyuk, we created two Risograph-printed animated flipbooks using palindromes like “NOON” and “EYE,” allowing the animations to be read from any point. This playful experiment further investigates typography within a 3D grid represented digitally.
LICHTSPIEL–ECHT. BEWEGEND. UNVERGESSLICH.
The corporate design for the fictional arthouse cinema LICHTSPIEL was created as part of a Type & Identity seminar at Mainz University of Applied Sciences in summer 2025. The visual identity is built around a simple, familiar star composed of four lines. This minimalist symbol forms the foundation of the design, which is systematically deconstructed into elements that recur across all applications.
Straight and slanted lines appear repeatedly—in posters, typography, and graphic details. Repetition plays a central role: lines and letters are arranged rhythmically, patterns emerge through serial arrangement. Lines strung together are reminiscent of a film strip, and the star itself becomes a stylized film reel in motion.
The concept for LICHTSPIEL combines a minimalist, graphic language with subtle allusions to the medium of film, creating a striking visual identity that is closely linked to the cinema experience.
LICHTSPIEL–ECHT. BEWEGEND. UNVERGESSLICH.
Design: Marei Hager, Emily Wagner, Jakob Jenderek
Supervision: Julia Kahl
Media: Brand book, animations, posters, program booklet, stickers, menu, tickets
Language: German
Production: Druck und Papier HS Mainz (Marco Moll and Luis Außem)
Geo Sans
GEO is an experimental font pushing the limits of how many anchor points a font file can store.
This font is inspired by geological rock samples, one of the objects I find most inspiring these days. Endless complex intertwining sets of natural physical data shape these rocks in a way that could never be recorded, let alone reproduced. They tell stories in a language consisting of form, color and structure.
The New DFB Brand Identity
The German Football Association (DFB) has undergone a design transformation. Its new brand identity embraces both heritage and progress—from a fresh color palette to a fully variable typeface that captures the emotion and dynamism of the game. Developed in collaboration with Strichpunkt Design, the redesign connects the past and the future through energy, clarity, and inclusivity.
We spoke with Holger Merk, Head of Brand Department / Staff Unit, DFB GmbH, about how the federation’s new visual identity brings its mission to life and unites a community of millions under one design language.
Julia Kahl: The DFB is the umbrella organization for 26 regional football associations and more than 25,000 clubs—a network that reaches millions of people across the country. How do you even begin to approach a redesign for a brand of that scale and significance, one that touches so many different audiences?
Holger Merk: First, we broke the brand down into its core building blocks to really understand what people inside and outside expect from it. Then, when we put it back together, we shaped a clear profile with three key dimensions where the brand creates the biggest impact through all its projects and initiatives. That process gave us a sharp vision for the rebrand.
The DFB’s work spans three core areas:
Organization—administrative, structural, and management topics
Society—social responsibility and community engagement
Sport—everything that happens on the pitch
Each of these areas now has its own visual expression, while core brand elements like the logo, typeface, color palette, and the characteristic pitch grid remain consistent. How is this visual differentiation achieved in practice, and what defines each area’s look and feel?
Each dimension highlights a core area of our work and gives the brand its own distinct vibe. Organization focuses on our work with regional divisions, the DFL, UEFA, FIFA—so its look is formal and structured. Sport is where our passion lives: full of energy and emotion, and that’s exactly what the design should express. To make these differences tangible, we tap into our full brand toolkit. In Sport, that means bold neon on deep green, dynamic use of our variable typeface, and a grid-style Supersign for extra movement and impact.
As a platform with a focus on typography, we’re especially intrigued by the new DFB Sans. It’s now a fully variable typeface designed to convey the rhythm and energy of football. Could you tell us more about how the type system was developed and how this new flexibility translates into daily communication?
Originally, DFB Sans was developed in an extended character set and only a few font styles (Condensed, Regular, Bold), mainly as upright and italic. The sans serif geometric design is derived from the visual language of the picturemark and references the pitch lines typically found on a soccer field, which are also part of the visual design repertoire of our design assets.
Typography plays a central role in the visual DNA of the DFB, and it probably has the highest recognition value across the entire design language. By developing it into a variable font and pushing the font’s borders to Thin and Black, Compressed and Super Extended, we now have the opportunity to reflect the depth of German soccer, convey more emotion, and allow us to create a visual volume ranging from “loud” to “quiet”. Apart from the technical features offered by variable fonts, it can be used to express emotions at the font level, particularly in digital and moving applications, which we previously only had in images.
In addition to the main logo, the DFB introduced a “super sign” as part of its new design system. What’s the story behind this super sign, and how does it interact with the core logo?
Over my 20 years at the DFB, the inner structure of our logo has often been considered as a design element—but for a long time, any attempt to modify it was strictly off-limits. In recent years, we’ve become more flexible. During the rebranding process, we realized the potential of this inner structure—what you could call the ‘soul’ of the logo—as a powerful design feature. That’s why we developed a 3D version. Today, the Supersign allows us to infuse every piece of communication with a touch of the association’s identity. We love that! It’s not about interacting with the logo itself: the Supersign works as a bold, meaningful design element.
A large set of icons and pictograms was created as part of the rebranding. The ones representing diversity and togetherness are particularly striking. How and where are these icons being used across DFB communications and platforms?
Icons, especially those representing diversity and community, play a key role in the Society dimension. This is where we drive projects and initiatives that happen off the pitch. Often, we collaborate with organizations and institutions that bring their expertise to the table. A current example is our Year of Schools project, which aims to connect football and education more closely.
In these projects, we don’t have the usual emotional imagery from the game, and the context is often more educational. That’s why we rely on icons to deliver content clearly and make it easy to understand across all touchpoints.
“Be it an umbrella or sub-brand, foundation or competition—every brand in our team has its own character made up of typography, colour scheme, imagery and graphic elements. And all brands together form and strengthen the big picture like a well-coordinated team: the DFB design language.” This quote perfectly encapsulates the new spirit of the DFB’s identity. What did Strichpunkt Design change or introduce to make the DFB design language more future-oriented and inclusive?
The old look of the umbrella brand was clean, white, and strategically unemotional. It reflected the organisational areas of the DFB and thus communicated little to no emotion. In the redesign, the sub-brand levels were dissolved. All the areas covered by the DFB are now reflected in one umbrella brand identity. Within the brand, a distinction is made between the three main areas of activity: organisation, society, and sport. Therefore, the brand’s visual implementation must also enable this balancing act. The new supersign symbolises the association’s work, which ranges from amateurs and children to professional sports. In other words, all facets of football. All in all, the new design elements create a more open, accessible, and approachable brand. This is exactly how the DFB will be positioned in the future.
The DFB’s rebrand is more than a visual update—it’s a cultural statement about what football represents in Germany today: diversity, movement, and belonging. Through color, form, and type, the new identity celebrates both the grassroots and the grand stage, reflecting football’s power to unite. It’s a design language that feels unmistakably DFB—and unmistakably alive. Good work!
MARTIAN — ALIEN FLORA
This typographic work is based on a hand-drawn experiment inspired by the idea of an alien flora from another planet. Each letter grows like a living organism, with stems, leaves and organic curves replacing traditional strokes. The type is imagined as a species of botanical life, shaped by an unknown environment and unfamiliar natural laws. The result blends typography and science fiction into a decorative, otherworldly visual language.
Kado
Kado is a typeface inspired by the traditional Japanese art of ikebana, embodying its essence of balance, harmony, and natural beauty. Each letterform reflects the delicate shapes of petals and pedicels and can be arranged like flowers, coming together to form unique compositions reminiscent of ikebana arrangements.
Kado captures a duality of clarity and fluidity, serving as both outline and shadow, creating a harmonious interplay of form and expression.
Black Friday Special
Latent Figures is a catalogue of automatic ideas — a collection of signs from an unknown memory. Our almost-sold-out publication by Jannis Maroscheck is available at a super special price with 70% off this weekend only. With this sort-of-dictionary, Maroscheck creates a visual language that blends pragmatic graphic design aesthetics with elusive imagery. A collection of shapes that often approximate something we know or understand, but their meaning doesn‘t quite want to resolve, they revolve around themselves, somewhere between meaning and nonsense. Offering a space to project one’s own imagination.
Latent Figures
€34 → €10
28.11.–30.11.25, 24:00 (UTC+1)
Penrose Helix Visual Identity & Publication
The visual identity and typographic intervention respond to this complexity by adopting a method of iterative displacement—collaging typographic strata, bending formal hierarchies, and allowing linguistic fragments to fold into one another. Rather than treating design as a static vessel for content, the system foregrounds the instability of the tower as both physical form and social metaphor: an entity whose apparent solidity masks diffuse forms of influence radiating into its environment.
Positioned Realities Visual Identity
For Positioned Realities, Can Yang developed a visual identity that accompanies curators, artists, and audiences navigating the exhibition’s transnational and decolonial questions. Blending multiple typefaces, intuitive lettering, and hand-drawn illustrations refined through digital translation, she crafted a responsive system that invites dialogue and connects heterogeneous works within a shared visual framework.
Release Party & Open House
Our Open House celebrating the release of Slanted Magazine #46—Cairo was truly unforgettable—and we’re still glowing from the energy, conversations, and amazing people who joined us.
The evening kicked off in the best possible way: with great music, good drinks, and delicious food by EAT HAPPY, setting the perfect warm and cozy atmosphere for everyone to unwind, mingle, and celebrate.
We were then excited to dive into two inspiring talks. Markus Lange opened the program by sharing the story behind his photographic series Tayara—The Kites That Flew Too High. During his time in Cairo at the height of the pandemic, colorful kites filled the skies above the city’s rooftops—symbols of joy, freedom, and brief escape for children and families. Shortly after, the Egyptian government banned them, citing accidents and even fears of “espionage.” Lange’s photographs capture this delicate interplay between freedom and restriction, playfulness and politics, transformation and control.
Following this, Dirk Altenkirch took us back to his unforgettable journey through Egypt in 1983. His photographs and portraits from that weeks-long trip offer rare and intimate glimpses into everyday life far from tourist paths—moments that, strikingly, have changed very little to this day. His stories and images provided a unique historical counterpoint to Cairo’s contemporary creative scene.
A major highlight of the evening was the exclusive screening of Cairo Unscripted—Exploring Cairo’s Past, Present, and Creative Future,edited with incredible care and precision by the talented team at NTSAL Chamber of Design. The film offered a vivid, emotional, and unscripted look behind the scenes of our team’s journey to Cairo—and into the people, places, and stories that shaped this issue.
We loved seeing so many of you browse our shelves, discover fresh releases, and even snag limited and sold-out editions available only at the event. Most of all, we’re grateful for the warm conversations, the laughs, and the inspiring exchanges we shared throughout the night.
A huge thank-you to everyone who joined us—you made the evening truly special. ❤️
We can’t wait to welcome you back for the next Slanted Open House!
Perversions
This work explores the Arabizi writing system in relation to Mahraganat, an Egyptian genre of rap. Arabizi is a system of writing Arabic using a combination of English letters and numbers. Mahraganat lyrics are written in Arabizi and Arabic, the two versions are then forced to blend and coexist, rupturing traditional and classic forms of Arab culture and revealing new imaginings of communication.
There is no backwards or forward
‘There is no backwards or forward’ is a typographic experiment that explores the geological connections between language and culture. Using molten aluminium scraps, cultural remnants in flux, it transforms material into living letterforms. This project reimagines type as organic, performative and evolving, challenging the anthropocentric view that matter is inert and voiceless.