Different Ways of Seeing

When I was a child, I once fell ill with a fever and felt as if the world was spinning. As I stared at the white ceiling of my bedroom, I was struck by peculiar questions: Why am I in a body looking like this? How is the world I see different from what others see? Then, I looked into some research and readings on neuroscience, and I came across many interesting findings: The visual information received by our brains actually undergoes a process of inversion, similar to how cameras work. We humans are creatures that are good at making up stories and giving them meaning. We love creating and listening to stories. Graphic design shapes human perception and biases through visual storytelling, acting as a form of visual poetry that can convey complex ideas and evoke emotional responses. This thesis demonstrates how the storytelling in graphic design can subtly alter the observer’s consciousness, steering emotions, beliefs, and actions. It aims to create immersive experiences that provoke discussion on the relationship between design and perception.

Different Ways of Seeing was born out of a simple question: What is sweetness? It’s so simple, yet completely indescribable. We’ve moved from our basic instincts to now creating virtual worlds, evolving from animal to AI. As our world becomes more and more immersive, bias occurs and perception becomes more subjective, moving our reality further from actual information in this unstoppable process. Design structures people’s perceptions and changes the way they communicate with each other. My ideas have been influenced by a podcast talking about the boundary of virtuality and reality by a postdoctoral researcher Ding Liu from Harvard. I realized how subjective we are as creatures in the way we perceive the world, and how interesting the biases occurred in the perception are to us as graphic designers. I will be composing a unique story, a journey in which I will share and interact with all the unexpected visual deviations of the experience for each viewer. We might be able to find a little bit of primitive romance through this journey. Humans used to acquire colors from nature at the beginning of our history, yet as technology has progressed, we’ve become less and less romantic.

One can take this a step further as Joshua Ramey shows us; that if  reality is a simulacrum, then the “truth” of reality cannot be discovered by distinguishing the authentic from the inauthentic, the accidental from the essential, the artificial from the real. The authenticity of the real is discovered, in Deleuze’s view, in certain kinds of betrayal. True vitality is found only in certain obsessions, knowledge in a kind of intimacy with the obscure, the true nature of time in discontinuity, and genuine health only in extremes. If the “upright” Platonist proceeds out of the cave, out of the world of appearances, the overturned Platonist is a diver who plunges into the depths of the cave itself, into the uncanny world of difference and repetition. Against Platonic representation we get Deleuze.

In the midst of an illness marked by a high fever, I was transported back to a peculiar memory from my childhood, a memory that seemed to mirror the depth of my existential reflections during my fevered state. Confined to the small, dimly lit room of my present, staring into the vast whiteness of the ceiling, I was reminded of days spent beside a bustling road near my primary school campus. Back then, a close friend and I would stand as silent observers, our young minds fascinated by the stream of cars and pedestrians. We pondered the inner lives of those passing by, speculating about the myriad emotions, thoughts, and soulful experiences hidden within each person. This memory, a tableau of innocence and wonder, resonated deeply with my current state of vulnerability and introspection. As I lay there, feverish and adrift in thoughts, the sensation that my soul might at any moment detach from my body was terrifying yet eerily familiar. It echoed those childhood musings about the essence of existence within others. Now, faced with my own existential crisis, I grappled with profound questions: “Why do I exist as the person I am, bound to a body bearing my name? What is the essence of this ‘self’ I perceive, and what purpose does it serve in the grand tapestry of existence?” This blend of past and present reflections brought to the forefront a profound sense of connection with the wider human experience, yet also a deep-seated feeling of isolation as I confronted these unanswerable questions alone, hovering on the brink of an existential void.

When embarking on an academic journey to explore the vast expanse of graphic design, I found myself irresistibly drawn to a foundational concept: “primitive romance.” This term, at once ancient and perpetually new, served as the cornerstone of my thesis. It is, after all, inevitable to talk about love in this context. Love, in its most unadulterated form, is not just an emotion but a powerful force that influences every aspect of human creativity and expression, including the realm of graphic design. The notion that love encompasses a “super large and universal topic” is not an exaggeration. It stretches across time and space, influencing cultures, art, literature, and yes, even the pragmatic world of design. For those of us who have chosen to walk the path of a graphic designer, it’s not merely the allure of aesthetics or the thrill of creativity that drives us; it’s love. Love for the art form, love for the message, and love for the impact our creations can have on the world. This profound connection to love impacts how we approach our work. It becomes our muse and our critic, guiding us through the complexities of design with a gentle hand. When we talk about love in the context of graphic design, we’re not just referring to passion or affection; we’re talking about a deep, intrinsic motivation that compels us to strive for excellence, to push the boundaries of what’s possible, and to leave our mark on the world through our designs.Furthermore, love manifests in the criteria we obsess over in our work. It’s in the painstaking attention to the detail, the relentless pursuit of perfection, and the deep desire to communicate effectively and evoke emotions. Discussing love within the context of my thesis on “primitive romance” and graphic design is not only inevitable but essential. Love, with its multifaceted influence on creativity, expression, and motivation, is at the heart of what it means to be a graphic designer. It shapes our perspectives, fuels our passions, and defines our approach to the creative process, making it an indispensable element in the exploration of graphic design.

The nineteenth-century American clergyman and abolitionist Henry Ward Beecher once wrote, “A tool is but the extension of a man’s hand, and a machine is but a complex tool.” These words presaged, by more than a century, a line of scientific research into “embodiment”: how humans’ wealth of sensory inputs-including the touch and visual perception involved in manipulating a tool-modify the sense of one’s physical self. Embodiment implies that when one holds a screwdriver, for example, the brain morphs its representation of a “hand” until that representation reaches all the way to the very tip of the tool. Whether they are tools, toys, or mirror reflections, external objects temporarily become part of who we are all the time. When I put my eyeglasses on, I am a being with 20/20 vision, not because my body can do that it can’t,  but because my body-with-augmented-vision-hardware can. So that’s who I am when I wear my glasses: a hardware-enhanced human with 20/20 vision. If you have thousands of hours of practice with a musical instrument, when you play music with that object, it feels like an extension of your body, because it is. When you hold your smartphone in your hand, it’s not just the morphological computation happening at the surface of your skin that becomes part of who you are. As long as you have Wi-Fi or a phone signal, the information available all over the internet (both true and false information, real news and fabricated lies) is literally at your fingertips. Even when you’re not directly accessing it, the immediate availability of that vast maelstrom of information makes it part of who you are, lies and all. Be careful with that.

Graphic design shapes human perception and biases through visual storytelling, acting as a form of visual poetry that can convey complex ideas and evoke emotional responses, thus influencing cognitive and cultural shifts. This book demonstrates how the storytelling in graphic design can subtly alter the observer’s consciousness, steering emotions, beliefs, and actions. It aims to create immersive experiences that provoke discussion on the relationship between design and perception.

Find the project here.

45 Symbols—Clay to Code

How can research findings, personal experiences, and complex ideas be translated into a concise visual identity?

45 Symbols—Clay to Code examines how emerging artists and designers develop systematic approaches to a visual language, inspired by one of the most enigmatic objects in media history: the 3,700-year-old, still-undeciphered Phaistos Disc, embossed with 45 distinct symbols. The works present a range from personal narratives to global themes and demonstrate how an original visual grammar can be constructed.

Over more than a decade, the internationally organized design seminar series The Phaistos Project–Forty-five Symbols has developed to a global community driven by open calls, workshops, exhibitions, and risograph publications. The present volume, 45 Symbols—Clay to Code, brings together over 2,000 symbols as the result of these joint efforts. It is not only a living archive of research inquiries but also a testament to collective experimentation, bold visions, and the expression of intercultural dialogue.

Publisher: Slanted Publishers
Editors & Design: Olivier Arcioli, Pascal Glissmann, Andreas Henrich
Release: January 2026
Format: 21 × 28 cm
Volume: 320 pages
Language: English
Printing: offset printing
Paper: Munken Print White, 115 g/sm
Workmanship: Softcover, Swiss brochure with flaps, thread stitching, black thread, foil lamination
ISBN: 978-3-948440-95-4
Price: €32.– (DE)

BUY HERE!

WHITELIES INDEX

WHITELIES INDEX is an ongoing print series striding on the line between contemporary publication and archive. In the mindset of a research paper we present the works of artists, photographers and archival images—creating a dialogue that invites to explore the beauty found at the intersection of fashion and culture. The publication is thought of as a long term project creating a reference point for artists, fashion designers and creatives to look into in search of inspiration.

What unfolds in this first book publication of WHITELIES STUDIO is a conversation with a place, about a place, and with the people shaped by it. At the heart of this dialogue stands the West Lake in Hangzhou—a city where tradition and modernity walk side by side. The CHANEL MDA Show was staged here in December 2024—not merely as a runway event—but as a sensory and environmental composition. Beneath Hangzhou’s surface of high-speed rail lines and seamless connectivity lies a slower rhythm, one where culture has not only been preserved but continues to breathe. Like an Open Fold, this encounter reveals the surfaces we touch—creases as paths, impressions as memories—offering a shared space between exposure and reflection.

The first edition of WHITELIES INDEX brings together four artists in a shared encounter with that rhythm, exploring how this landscape informs and transforms our practice. As with everything WHITELIES has stood for as a magazine in the past, this first book publication under our new direction has a visual and cultural exchange at its heart—a multi-layered conversation between artists and landscapes, between the tangible and the invisible. Between reality and a dream. WHITELIES INDEX is recorded in the German National Bibliography by the German National Library.

WHITELIES INDEX — THE OPEN FOLD

Publisher: WHITELIES STUDIO
Release: 2025
Format: 20 × 26.6 cm
Volume: 128 pages
Language: English
Printer: KOPA, Lithuania
ISBN: 978-3-00-082693-1
Price: €30.–

Available at the WHITELIES ONLINE SHOP and in selected bookstores worldwide.

No Barriers, Just Theater

The Orangerie Theater Cologne is stepping into a new visual identity. Crafted by the Cologne-based studio We will love Mondays, led by Felix Bosse, this redesign is more than just a fresh look—it’s a statement.

“The Orangerie Theater is a space for dialogue and participation,” says Dr. Sarah Youssef, the theater’s artistic director. “We wanted a visual identity that reflects this mindset–not through being flashy, but through accessibility. A design that doesn’t assume, but invites.”

The approach wasn’t about following trends. It was about removing barriers—because culture shouldn’t have any, and neither should design. Typography, signage, digital interfaces, and print materials were all developed so that information is not only seen, but understood—intuitive, effortless, barrier-free. Shapes were simplified, content was clearly structured, and navigation became second nature. This isn’t flashy branding; it’s design that communicates values without shouting.

“We weren’t trying to reinvent the theater,” says Felix Bosse. “We wanted to make its openness visible—a visual identity that excludes no one.”

Typeface of the Month: Cassis

Check out our new Typeface of the Month: Cassis! 

Cassis is a generous, soulful sansserif with more interest in personality than perfection; a sharp and generously proportioned typeface that projects an affable confidence. It draws from geometric logic and historical precedent without being limited by either: Swelling curves, reaching terminals, and a teetering balance of stroke weights infuse its geometric structure with plenty of flavor. Cassis is designed to offer compelling density at larger sizes.

Designed by Frere-Jones Type Senior Designer Nina Stössinger, the first versions of Cassis date back to 2014, and its development traces Nina’s own journey from their native Switzerland to New York City. Informed by early- through midcentury lettering in public space spotted in Switzerland, Belgium, and the United States, Cassis draws inspiration from both sides of the Atlantic, infusing European roots with American energy.

A powerful voice for branding, identity, and titling work, the Cassis family contains seven weights, from the spare Thin through the forceful Black. All styles support over 200 languages, covering all major languages in the Latin alphabet in Western, Central, and Eastern Europe; North, Central, and South America; and Vietnam.

Learn more about its backstory here.

Typeface of the Month: Cassis! 

Foundry: Frere-Jones Type 
Designer: Nina Stössinger
Release: January 2026
File Formats: OTF, TTF, WOFF, WOFF2
Styles / widths / weights: 7 weights (Thin, XLight, Light, Regular, Medium, Bold, Black)
Price per style / family: Single style $60 / Family $200

BUY

Werkschau Communication Design

As part of this year’s exhibition, students from the Communication Design program at Hochschule RheinMain will present their Bachelor’s and Master’s theses. The exhibition will take place from February 5th to 7th, 2026, and invites you to explore the creative world of communication design. At the campus you can experience how initial ideas and sketches transform into tangible projects.

The exhibition demonstrates how diverse design can be. Photography, film, editorial, web & UX design, animations, illustration, corporate design, crossmedia—and everything that falls in between—will be on display.
The exhibition makes visible the work that students have spent months developing.
Come by and immerse yourself in the design of tomorrow. In addition to the Bachelor’s and Master’s theses, there will also be a range of exciting semester projects on display.

More info here.

Parameter A

Parameter A is an experimental typographic system using audio as an active input to generate letterform abstractions. Sonic qualities are translated through code into audio-reactive typography that continuously evolves. As a hybrid print-digital publication, printed pages act as visual triggers for AR extensions, activating sound-driven typographic animations. Focusing on a single letter reduces complexity and explores how sound shapes typographic behavior.

Observation Waves

Typographic images inspired by water and waves utilize compositions of letters stripped of their textual meaning. The fragment from the graphic series “Wave Observations” presented here can, in a sense, be perceived as a holiday postcard, intended to convey a narrative through words, but preferring instead to convey the atmosphere of the observed location.

Roz

This experimental alphabet is based on the idea that progress inevitably leads to either growth or decay. The typeface originates from curved elements inspired by a stylized plant flower cross-section, which form a flexible base and are gradually transformed. The alphabet is divided into two independent halves that expand, decay, or combine both tendencies, causing the letters to grow beyond their boundaries, interfere with one another, or gradually lose legibility.

Circa Sans

This typeface, built on grotesque traditions, prioritizes readability while carrying a playful, free, and whimsical character. Its flexibility follows rules yet rests on solid, unshakable foundations. With its forms, it subtly pushes the boundaries of typography, experimental and innovative, and will soon be expanded with Ultra weight, available in 10 styles.

I can’t breath

The project explores legibility as an exchange rather than a given. Conceived as a typographic installation, it responds to the murder of George Floyd and the phrase “I can’t breathe” by using breath as both material and condition for reading. An excerpt from the publicly released transcript of his last words is applied to a glass surface using a stencil and water-repellent spray. Text appears briefly through condensation and disappears again. Reading becomes effort, time, and loss.

Magnetic Type

The work explores typography through physics using metal shavings and magnets. Magnetic fields shape a tactile, physical typeface in which organic material behavior creates textures defined by intentional imprecision.

Gradientor

Mithilfe des Open-Tools Gradientor wurde Typografie als dynamisches System untersucht. Durch die Überlagerung von Gradienten und Schrift entstehen instabile, sich wandelnde Formen. Der experimentelle Entstehungsprozess verweist sinnbildlich auf die Verletzlichkeit und Gleichzeitigkeit von Sichtbarkeit und Ausgrenzung in der Gesellschaft. Mit der Plakatserie möchte ich dazu aufrufen, eine Änderung des Artikel 3 (3) im Grundgesetz vorzunehmen zum Schutz der sexuellen und geschlechtlichen Identität

Froth

Froth is intended to be a display font that deconstructs the organic movements of milk frothing and transforms them into an experimental modular system of procedurally generative overlays. Circles and parallel shifts are used to construct a typeface that combines process, tool and form into a dynamic design concept.

Casse-croûte

“Casse-croûte” is a variable font whose shapes and concept stem from a simple observation: how can letters and typographic rhythm be used to represent the behavior of food inside a sandwich? Begun in 2023, this font is still in development and currently features two variable axes and 300 glyphs for its base weight.

Tkanika

Tkanika is an experimental typeface that recalls a time when writing could be touched. Rooted in weaving, it treats letters as patterns, knots, and gaps rather than neutral carriers of text. Built on drafting diagrams used in the design of weaving patterns on looms, its three cuts explore structure, ornament, and material irregularity.

Lettres Mutatiques

“Lettres Mutatiques” is a project that aims to visually represent what letters might look like if they became organic living beings. Created during the 36 Days of Type in 2023, 72 glyphs were drawn, as for each letter there is a regular and a mutant version, which takes up as much space as possible. Research was then carried out on After Effects to find the best way to reproduce this organic mutation, originally inspired by the animation of Tetsuo in Akira, by Katsuhiro Ōtomo (1988).

#BB BubbleButton

Inspired by things you like to touch like rubber, finger games and buttons, the #BB BubbleButton font shifts glyphs into three-dimensional space. In the designed system, each letter fills a circular area and the letters merge with the background. The focus is on the resulting surface structure, which can be applied both digitally and analogously: Their materiality makes the letters seem tangible. You can imagine how they feel.

for free

Typographic experiment, based on a vintage distressed long-sleeve found in front of my house. Hand drawn letterforms are distorted with layer styles, showcasing depth of distressed clothing through type. The letterforms draw inspiration from heavy music merch, such as Hardcore Punk. Standing up against norms, like wearing used clothing. Finally the base letterforms were spray-painted onto the long-sleeve with a stencil, bridging digital experimentation with physical and well known techniques.

inside cologne

inside cologne is a fictive all-city music festival in cologne. Using the city, with its various clubs and locations as festival ground and combining various genres, an adaptive branding was created. Year 2027 was created by Felix Darius, as seen here. Ceylan Aksu (2025) and Paula Geisen (2026) visualized other years of the festival. 2027 is focused on expressive use of typography and distortion, celebrating the the variety of people coming together, expressing themselves and enjoying music.

Panzersperre

Panzersperre was created for the “Westwall Geschichten” exhibition late 2025. It draws inspiration from tank barriers, which are part of the Westwall (Siegfried-Linie) from WW2. Only capital letters are available, with various alternatives, representing the various forms and sizes of the real tank barriers of the Siegfried-Linie.

//Glyph?

This work analyzes the informational content of digital characters. Using established methods, data is extracted from existing characters to create new ones. A reproducible process is developed in Processing, enabling clear visual representation. The study explores methodological approaches for data collection, transformation into typographic forms, and generative programming as a means to teach algorithmic structures.