Cadran

By definition, to “coexist” means to exist together at the same time and therefore influencing one another. This graphic proposal illustrates the two aspects of this notion: living together despite our differences, our singularities and our faults, but also living at the same time, the same days, the same hours and the same minutes.

These circular shapes are poor materials gleaned from the streets, workshops and fablabs. These circles become imperfect clocks which, however, would rotate together in a coherent orchestra.

The design is made by Paul Bergès and the poem is written by Iban Mediavilla.

Animated Alphabet of Variable Fonts

If you’re interested in variable fonts, that are fun to play with, hop over to letterspace.amsterdam to find an Animated Alphabet of Variable Fonts.

letterspace.amsterdam usually showcases Amsterdam’s typography through informal monthly gatherings, lectures and presentations at the studio of typographer Johannes Verwoerd and type designers Diana Ovezea, Sabina Chipară, and Edgar Walthert. However, with the 23rd edition of letterspace aligning with #36daysoftype and coinciding the height of the global CoViD-19 pandemic, the organizers decided instead to invite their speakers and visitors to push the possibilities of the OpenType Font Variations technique and generate a hallucinogenic animated alphabet for an online presentation to everyone stuck indoors.

Variable font technology has been around for years, yet its full potential has largely remained untapped. Fonts based on multiple axes and masters quickly become too complex and time-consuming to finish. Thus, for the purpose of this alphabet, the 36 participating designers have each focused their creative energies on a single letter, resulting in a psychedelic world of possibilities. The designs range from architectural to organic, from pixelated to glitchy, and from historical to futuristic. These letters aren’t short movie clips, but variable font files that can be enjoyed by everyone, adjusted, used as inspiration and grown into a wildly variegated jungle of breathing leaves. When viewed together on the dedicated mini-website, the animated letters revive the old dream of newly created, kinetic, illuminated codices. One can almost already envisage the words that will be set with these electrifying initials. Furthermore, the alphabet is an open-ended, unofficial snapshot of who’s who in Amsterdam’s current typographic design world.

We’re not going to describe each letter in detail, but will instead highlight a few that jump out at us. Donald Roos, one half of VetteLetters, begins the proceedings with an A that starts out by filling its frame and demonstrating all the possibilities of the designspace. The world-famous American designer David Carson, who fell in love with Amsterdam during an artist residency at the Zoku Hotel and never left the city, created the C, which was engineered at letterspace and consists of two seemingly incompatible C’s morphing into each other, revoking the old Flash “tweenings” of the late nineties. This C is no longer just surfing but is now also the wave itself. Several submissions needed a fair bit of work for their transformation into working Variable Font letters. For instance, some initially wouldn’t work on iPhones. The challenges this posed for letterspace’s team revealed how a lot of graphic designers’ thinking is still set around current animation techniques. Even a fairly simple step-by-step animation such as the masonic M by Richard Niessen—the governor of the Palace of Typographic Masonry, another independent venture serving and showcasing the Netherlands’ graphic design community—needed a lot of work to make it a Variable Font. The same goes for the tiny dots that animate Maarten van Disseldorp’s D, which had to be sorted and arranged by Diana Ovezea to fit font software’s limitations. The result is a letter that any number of online newspapers would be wise to snap up.

Fittingly, two pioneers of digital type-design are represented in our showcase. Erik van Blokland, who together with Just van Rossum was responsible for the first dynamically created typeface, FF Beowolf, compiled the L’s of the 34 standard postscript fonts onto a single axis. Van Rossum, for his part, co-contributed the number 1, a futuristic character from an ecstatic set of almost pagan-like symbols that he produced with Hansje van Halem for the Lowlands Festival.

Working from the isolation of his home quarantine, Edgar Walthert fashioned a 0 that mines the rich spectrum of facial expressions. His 0 is not simply a zero, but also an emoticon and an icon that recalls the many icons that make up his Logical typeface. It is perhaps the most vivid example of how much life can be breathed into letters.

TIN.studio’s letters perform extreme gymnastics within the confines of their frame, Our Polite Society’s X connects software to mysticism and Underware’s U shows rather than leaks the result of a special technique that has been years in the making, called Higher Order Interpolation, and that enables the merging of unstable media with handwriting. The alphabet also features Nick Sherman of v-fonts.com, Arthur Reinders Folmer, who is known as a wizard of variable colour fonts, and Sabina Chipară, whose spiky S offers slider settings that appear to contain entire software suites in themselves, a quality it shares with several others in this alphabet. And finally, Daniel Maarleveld’s 9, a revelation of sheer beauty which shares this distinction with all of his animated typography, which in turn has won him a wide following since last year’s #36daysoftype and resulted in multiple appearances on museum book covers, LED screens and the like.

The amount of work and range of skills required to create this alphabet typically puts fonts like these beyond the reach of almost everyone but highly trained specialists, well-funded institutions and wealthy private practices. However, the letters presented here can be enjoyed by the general public and tweaked by anyone with a desire to enliven them even further. Perhaps the renaissance of the thousand-year-old interplay of language and image will yield a range of electronic documents that level the playing field for designers, coders, typographers and poets. And while this showcase of the alphabet is not intended for direct use, it nonetheless functions as a kind of trailer for the many variable fonts to come. One can almost begin to picture the manifestos that will be written with them, visualize the grand compendiums of extinct species or alien encounters that will be adorned by these letters. The wealth of potential applications might currently exceed our imagination, but for now, to simply behold and appreciate the creativity and beauty captured in these 36 tiny faces is to enjoy the buzz of being alive with them.

Animated Alphabet of Variable Fonts

Curator: letterspace.amsterdam
Author: Dirk Vis

Editor: Siji Jabbar
Twitter: @lttrspc
Instagram: @letterspace.amsterdam

another dropout

we humans coexist with nature. that’s a fact. or not? maybe not because we destroy it. if one destroys the other is it a coexistence still? and talking about escape from civilization in my other submission and calling it “dropout”, this one portrays both, dropout from civilization and dropout from destroying nature in relation.

United We Stand

Reference to the famous phrase by Greek storyteller Aesop. Simply by using the brilliant typeface ‘Typefesse’ by Océane Juvin, the human figure has been introduced in the letters, because, ultimately, coexistence is about people.

one

We have to grow together in unity, rather than isolate as separate nations. The abstract idea of flags that have been merged together. It symbolizes the one nation we should become.

A New Order

The times we are living showed how fragile, unequal and unprepared our society is, now it’s the moment to rethink the way we live and to take on a challenge to establish a “New Order” where words like tolerance, equality, solidarity and sustainability will matter.

Stay At Home Print Club

Wouldn’t it be great to collectively be creative in times of isolation? To work on, share and enjoy printed goods? The Stay At Home Print Club is something the graphic design and risography Studio Superkolor has been working on over the last weeks and they are super excited to share it with you today.

It’s an open call to all designers, illustrators and artists worldwide. Submit your A3 artwork and they’ll combine 3 artists from 3 different locations to print 3-colored Riso posters. These will be up for sale to collect money and support people who don’t have a home to stay at. You’ll find all needed information on their website.

You can get the results of Edition #01 over at Superkolor. Each poster costs 15.– to 30.– Euros (incl. VAT) + shipping costs. Edition #02 will be opened for submissions in May. All profits will be donated to Doctors Without Borders in Lesvos, Greece.

Let’s connect and make this into something beautiful together!

Stay At Home Print Club

Project by: Studio Superkolor
Edition #01 is online now 

Posters designed and printed: April 17th–April 30th
Format: 297 × 420 mm
Printing: three color Riso Prints
Paper: Pergraphica Natural Rough, 250 gsm
Price: Each poster 15,– to 30,– Euros (incl. VAT) + shipping costs
Buy

 

 

Modern status quo

Ego, common sense, poverty, climate change, wars, government decisions, civic freedoms, human rights? Set your own pace. Speak up. Do not be afraid of changes. Brighter days will come, stay safe and help each other. Be happy. You are not alone in this. Live and exist together, in peace, no matter the place, the name, the color or the language. Just to be human after all.

00:00 00

The concept of coexistence is represented through space-time parameters; the set of dots depicts the cities, related to the Time Zones, creating an abstract map of the world on a faded white sphere. The idea is to focus on the concept of here and now in a larger dimension; the dot itself as an indispensable unit to a larger and more complex design, whether it represents a city, a person, a housing complex, an institution and so on.
The artwork shows a date and time moved to zero that symbolize not only the possibility of restarting but also the immanent nature of coexistence, that sustains life.

ABTREIBEN IST OKAY! / IT’S OKAY TO ABORT!

Medicine students across the globe are often not taught how to conduct an abortion. They often teach themselves, using papayas because they resemble the human uterus.

In Germany, spreading information about abortions is a criminal offence.
Instead of supporting women with an unwanted pregnancy, they are not even given the chance to inform themselves freely.

Our poster is hanging in flat-shares and pubs, making detailed information accessible that otherwise is hard to get.
We want to kill the social stigma, break the silence. Because every third woman once makes the decision for an abortion.

The original size is DIN A1, printed in colour.

JAHRESAUSSTELLUNG / ANNUAL EXHIBITION

So, what can we as creatives contribute to figuring out how we as a global society want to coexist?
In a world so complex and so fast that nobody can understand it, where everything merges into a blurry background noise, we as creatives are constantly searching. Maybe even mediating, but in the first place searching.

I made this poster for the annual exhibition of the design department of my university, HTW Berlin, where I study communications design. “Jahresausstellung” is German for “annual exhibition”, where students of product design, fashion design and communications design show their works.

The original size is DIN A1, printed in colour.