Master & Master

During our research for the Slanted Magazine—Prague we became aware of the Prague-based furniture manufactory Master & Master. The company was founded in 2012 by Ondřej Zita and Luděk Šteigl.

Master & Master are characterized by the production of simple and efficient furniture with minimalist forms and natural production techniques. They create furniture as a product of everyday life. They appreciate the heritage of everyday product design that is simple and uncomplicated to produce and use.

The furniture of Ondřej and Luděk is not only beautiful, but also practical, of high quality, and made of durable materials. Everything it needs to become an absolute classic!

masterandmaster.eu

Where creativity lives: 40% discount now available on Creative Cloud

With inspiration, you can achieve great things. Show your creativity in all its shapes and colours by downloading the apps and tools from Adobe Creative Cloud, now for only €35.69 (incl. VAT) instead of €59.49 per month.

Every idea needs a home, a place to unfold. Artist Birgit Palma has built a whole city for her creativity. There’s a lot to discover: fantastic views, impressive perspectives and extraordinary buildings.

Birgit loves the unusual, playfully switching between perspectives and composing geometric colour surfaces in a very avant-garde way. Her artwork challenges the familiar. This mix of surrealism, op art and abstract geometry creates a fascinating effect.

In the Artist Spotlight, she talks about her work, her inspiration, coming trends and her favourite projects. Visit the Artist Spotlight!

What would your city of creativity look like? Would it be monochrome or colourful? Round or square? Ordered or chaotic? Try it out and secure Adobe Creative Cloud for only €35.69 (incl. VAT) instead of €59.49 per month only until 8 July.

Get started now!

Tino Pohlmann: New Works to Celebrate World’s Largest Arena

_a r e n a is the latest exhibition and book release from award-winning photographer Tino Pohlmann. Arena seeks to celebrate the beauty and grandeur of the Tour de France through its two great contributors: the harsh, rugged mountains of France and the hundreds of thousands of fans who transform this natural landscape into the world’s largest, open-air sporting venue. Pohlmann’s large format images make visible this unique fusion of nature and sport, and serve as an hommage to the spectators whose presence amid the colossal natural backdrop verify the true greatness of the Tour. _a r e n a is supported by longtime TPO partner Canyon Bicycles, as well as Phase One cameras of Denmark, makers of exclusive mid-format systems.

On June 27th, 2019, the public is invited to Heynstudios Berlin to join the opening and book launch set to coincide with the start of the 106th Tour de France. The exhibit will display stunning, large format Archival Pigment Prints certified according to the standard for museum quality and mounted on investment framing from Karo König/Berlin (National Gallery, Moma, Hamburger Bahnhof, Helmut Newton Foundation). The accompanying book, “_ a r e n a – Le colisée du Tour de France” will be released in a limited edition of 1,000 copies.

Concurrently, the exhibition will run at collected.photo, a new platform for photo editions developed by Düsseldorfer web agency Wysiwyg and Tino Pohlmann. Here users can browse galleries and purchase rare, museum-quality works online. Parts of the exhibition will also be traveling internationally, currently planned are Hamburg and Los Angeles starting from September.

When?
June 27th, 2019, 7 p.m.

Where?
Heynstudios
Heynstraße 15
13187 Berlin

Admission is free.

Slanted in Prag: 20YY Designers

When we took a look at the contemporary design scene in Prague in August 2018, we visited Robert Jansa and Petr Bosák from 20YY Designers in their studio.

20YY Designers is a graphic design studio founded in 2011 by Robert Jansa, Sébastien Bohner, Petr Bosák, and Adam Macháček. They are based in Lausanne, Prague and San Francisco and work mainly in the cultural field. Collaborations include, among others, Brno Biennial, California College of the Arts, Chronicle Books, Galerie Rudolfinum, Municipality of Montreux, Museum of Czech Literature, Museumsquartier Vienna, National Gallery in Prague, as well as the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

Take a look at our new issue and the video platform to meet more creative people from Prague!

Photography: © Dirk Gebhardt, Slanted Publishers

Pasto

Pasto is a fun and charming display type family of two styles and four weights each. The first one, Print, is a textured irregular stamp style, and Sharp is a straightforward soft-edged type with clean strokes.

As the name Pasto suggests (“Grass”), this typeface has natural shapes such as curves, curls, and confident but delicate lines, making it playful yet strong. Going from Thin to Bold and from Print to Sharp, Pasto takes the different sizes and textures in grass and translates them into different rhythms.

With developed OpenType Contextual Alternates, this type family provides three alternating alphabets that are automatically replaced in turn repeatedly to avoid the same letterforms and textures appearing next to each other, once more referring to its natural uniqueness inspiration. Ligatures are available for specific character combinations, to improve the overall look of the word or sentence.

Perfectly suited for graphic design and any display use, Pasto has very large language support allowing users to write in English, Spanish, Italian, French, German, Polish, Czech, Icelandic, among many others! Special characters and currency symbols are also available.

Pasto

Type foundry: Antipixel
Designer: Julia Martinez Diana
Release: May 2019
Weights: Thin, Light, Regular, Bold
Price: Style 11.99 Euro / Family 89.99 Euro (check the discounts on MyFonts)
Buy

Open Source Festival Congress 2019 – Komm raus. Denken!

After a successful premiere last year, the Open Source Festival Congress will take place on July 12th, 2019 under the motto “Come out. Think!” into the second round! The OSF Congress takes place during the Open Source Festivals, which this year for the 15th time offers a forum for pop music formats and creativity at the Horse Race Track Düsseldorf.

The main idea of the OSF Congress in 2019: How is one actually creative—in very different areas, industries and professions and which questions do we have to ask each other in order to shape a future worth living together? With international keynotes, investigative talks and cross-sector panels, the festival grounds will once again be used to create an extraordinary open-air projection surface for new ideas. Inspiration and input from the most innovative thinkers, leaders and doers of our time and the context of the global issues that move us today and tomorrow.

The speakers are available for touching and not as pure frontal sound. Every format gets its appropriate location, whether it’s a main stage with the greenest racecourse in the background, a cozy sofa for two to talk to each other or a discussion chair circle in an overseas container. The main thing is open air and lots of fresh air and swallow chirping to stimulate your thoughts.

At the OSF Congress 2019 these five topics in particular will be up for discussion: Communities, New Work, Digital Transformation, Sustainability and Urban Development. But as usual, there will be creative input from all imaginable areas and visitors can look forward to a colorful mix of lectures.

Slanted is giving away 1 × 2 tickets for the Open Source Festival Congress! To participate simply. To participate in the raffle, write an email with the subject “OSF Congress 2019” until June 28th, 2019, 11 am (UTC+1) to [email protected]. The winner will be drawn after the deadline and contacted by email. Whoever takes part in the raffle agrees to receive news from Slanted and accepts the data protection regulations. The legal recourse is excluded. We wish you good luck!

OSF CONGRESS 2019
July 12th, 2019, 9 a.m–9 p.m.
Horse Race Track Düsseldorf-Grafenberg

Tickets
Congress + Festival: 195.– € / 75.– € (Junior)
(Admission to the OSF Congress on July 12th, 2019 with 25 international speakers in keynotes, talks, panels and beer garden and to the Open Source Festival on July 13th, 2019 with musical and artistic program of 30 international artists on four stages, dance floor and numerous exhibition areas.)
Congress only: 175.– € / 55.– € (Junior) (Admission to the OSF Congress on 12 July 2019 with around 25 international speakers in keynotes, talks, panels and beer gardens.)

The OSF Congress is sponsored by the Ministry of Economics, Innovation, Digitization and Energy of North Rhine-Westphalia and the innogy Foundation for Energy and Society and supported by Wacom and sipgate.

More information about the Congress on the Website, Facebook and Instagram!

CA Saygon

The CA Saygon font family consists of a display variant with three weights and a text variant with 7 weights plus italics.

It was originally designed for the pitch for the redesign of the Sprengel Museum Hannover. But when another agency won the pitch, the way was clear to further develop the font for a wider audience. In the beginning there was the striking display variant with its unmistakable appearance. It contains unexpected fractions in the design that lead in combination to a coherent appearance in practical use. Numerous alternative letter forms keep boredom away.

Its calmer counterpart is CA Saygon Text, which only came into being after the pitch phase. It picks up shapes and proportions of the display variant, but was created with the clear objective of a text font suitable for everyday use. The typeface does not deny its influences by fonts such as Akzidenz Grotesk, but develops the repertoire of forms further in a completely independent direction. In letters such as f, t, i and r, for example, there are striking accents on the horizontal. All in all, the font with its high x-height makes a robust but friendly impression. With four different Stylistic Sets, the character of the font can be changed with a single click. A special highlight is Set 3, “Cape Style,” in which the typeface combines a single-storey a with a three-storey g—something you can hardly find in any other typeface.

Both fonts are very well equipped—in addition to Latin Extended, Cyrillic and Vietnamese are also available as language support. In addition to arrows and other useful additional characters, various OpenType features round off the professional overall picture, such as superscript and subscript digits, fractions and proportional and table figures. Great emphasis was on a professional kerning, which was done by kerning specialist Igino Marini (iKern).

CA Saygon

Type Foundry: Cape Arcona Type Foundry
Designer: Stefan Claudius & Thomas Schostok
Release: April 2019
Format: OTF
Weights: Thin, Light, Regular, Medium, Semibold, Bold, Extrabold 
Price: 
Saygon Complete Family: 200.– € / 230.– $
Saygon Text Family: 175.– € / 200.– $
Saygon Display Family: 70.– / 80.– $
Weights: 35.– € / 40.– $

Questions? Looking for answers in the middle of somewhere

This book is about asking and designing Questions. And beyond that, it has just received the Young Book Design Award from 109 submissions. An introduction by Juliane Hohlbaum:

When Prof. Sereina Rothenberger and Prof. David Bennewith invited graphic designers to give lectures at the University of Arts and Design in Karlsruhe, they noticed that there was a certain hesitation amongst students to ask questions. They were convinced that this was not out of a lack of curiosity, but more likely because they felt they might ask the ‘wrong’ questions. So Rothenberger and Bennewith came up with a seminar that was all about asking questions, which is also a valuable skill to have for a graphic designer. In May 2015, they invited Marietta Eugster, Elisabeth Klement and Laura Pappa, Vier5 and Honza Zamojski to an extended interview session at Otl Aicher’s ‘Institut für analoge Studien’ (Institute for analog studies) in Rotis (Germany). The seminar was repeated in November 2017, this time to meet and talk with Wayne Daly, Veronica Ditting, Manuel Krebs (Norm), Vinca Kruk (Metahaven) and Monika Maus.

Over two days, the invited designers were interviewed in a myriad of ways by groups of students, whose ­task it was to learn to conceive, ask, and design questions. Each text in the book was designed by the students who devised and conducted the respective interview. As a second part of the assignment the students had to design a typeface for their text, based on ‘Rotis’, a font released by Otl Aicher in 1989.

A team of students – Friederike Spielmannleitner, Simon Knebl and Béla Meiers – then collected the interviews of both seminars and designed the book. The varied content of the interviews is conspicuously structured into two sections, one for each visit to Rotis. The colours of the book represent the different seasonal atmospheres of the two seminars – a marshmallow in winter-purple and spring-yellow. They are also a homage to the colours the team discovered in Aicher’s work. The two sections are joined by a chapter of illustrative collages that give an atmospheric insight into the two trips to Rotis.

The work produced by students of all age groups is maybe the most contemporary insight you can have in the field of graphic design, since the work reflects their momentary curiosity and interests. It is interesting to question if and to what degree there is already visible differences between the designs made for the 2015 edition and those from 2017.

Friederike Spielmannleitner, Simon Knebl und Béla Meiers have answered a couple of questions on the book:

Why did you decide to publish the results of the seminars?
The invited designers brought a lot of time and interest to the project. This allowed the participating students to develop very free and experimental approaches to the interview format. These sometimes unconventional, but very intensive encounters with the guests, their creative practice and their positions as designers or artists led to highly diverse results. Especially the readiness to experiment, in the way the interviews were conducted, but also later when working on layout and text, makes the material interesting for an audience outside the school context as well. So, the idea of collecting the interview booklets from both seminars in a group publication came up quite early.

What was it like to be both authors and designers in this project? What were the advantages or difficulties?
Mostly, it was exciting for us to have this opportunity to look at the project from different perspectives. Since all three of us had a different relation to the project and the seminars, this double position enabled us to bring our own experiences to the later design process and to include different angles. It was also helpful to be able to relate to the positions of the other participants, to understand their approach and design better and to make this part of the book design as well. For us, there really was no disadvantage, some discussions became even more intense and in the end that led to stronger results.

Can you talk a little about these discussions and the decisions you made on how to deal with the “already existing” material? (The booklets the students made in the seminar)
At the beginning of the project, our discussions about how to incorporate the existing material were completely open. However, we quickly realized that the combination of so many authors and designers and the resulting mix of content and design positions was very valuable. On the one hand it shows how different designers work and on the other hand it is a very contemporary insight into the field of graphic design. Therefore, it was important for us not to change the design of the individual interviews, but to structure them in a way that makes it easier for readers to find their way around.

How did you decide what “extra” material to add?
Part of our work was certainly to bring all the material into one one – one object. This notion and the idea of restructuring already existing content also influenced our discussions and decisions regarding “extra” material. For example, we decided to draw our own font – based on a design by Otl Aicher – for cover, table of contents and foreword in order to frame the whole thing. We also designed a kind of stamp, which contains all important details of the interviews and separates them from each other. The book is divided into two parts, 2015 and 2017; those are complemented by a chapter of illustrative collages that give an atmospheric insight into the two trips to Rotis.

“Questions? – Looking for answers in the middle of somewhere” is now available at Spector Books. We raffle three copies of the book among our readers. To participate in the raffle, write an email with the subject “Questions?” and your postal address (for shipping) til July 1st, 2019, 11 a.m. (UTC+1) to [email protected]. The winner will be drawn after the deadline and contacted by email. Whoever takes part in the raffle agrees to receive news from Slanted and accepts the data protection regulations. The legal recourse is excluded. We wish you good luck!

Questions?
Looking for answers in the middle of somewhere.

Authors: Massimiliano Audretsch, Lorena Castro, Timothée Charon, Adrian Dickhoff, Matthias Gieselmann, Laurine Haller, Johannes Hucht, Bruno Jacoby, Desiree Kabis, Rana Karan, Simon Knebl, Janosch Kratz, Calvin Kudufia, Béla Meiers, Yannick Nuss, Sun Young Oh, Tatjana Pfeiffer, Kathrin Rüll, Simon Schelsky, Henrik Schmitz, Ioanna Spanachi, Tatjana Stürmer, Marcel Strauß, Henriette Wehking, Hendrik Whelan, Jannis Zell, Roman Zimmermanns, Shuaitong Zong
Editors: David Bennewith & Sereina Rothenberger for the Karlsruhe University of Arts and Design, Germany
Design: Béla Meiers, Simon Knebl, Friederike Spielmannleitner
Volume: 496
Language: English
Format: 120 × 190 mm
Publication date: February, 2019
Publisher: Spector Books
ISBN: 9783959052818

Buy here

Play Life—Neighbors in the Western Balkans

We are super excited to publish the book Play Life—Neighbors in the Western Balkans with photographs by renowned photographer Dirk Gebhardt. He was hunting traces of nationalism in the Western Balkans for the past eight years, which are now visible in this limited, numbered, and signed publication!

People around the world define themselves again through an old phenomenon: nation states. The nation as a savior in a complex world. One’s own state is glorified and lowers other nations in an imaginary hierarchy. Historically, nation states are a young phenomenon. Only since the French Revolution have people sought identity in language, borders and nation. Before that, kings ruled over a multitude of countries and peoples. Many languages ​​were spoken in their territory and the population belonged to different religions. In absolutism, the king held the people together.

New political ideas and economic production approaches required new identification mechanisms. Language, race and border now formed a nation. National myths emerged that historically established this new definition of the state. The Germans used the war against France in 1871, a German king was proclaimed emperor—although in 1815 Germany still consisted of more than 39 states that united to form the German Confederation. The new states of the Western Balkans used similar approaches to define their national identity. Some built pseudo-historical buildings and sculptures to underline the historical existence of their nations, others used religion and reinterpretations of historical moments in the Balkans to substantiate their belief in the right to dominate other nations. Looked at from the outside, it looks like a mimicry of commonly used patterns for building nations—it looks like “Play Life.”

The Balkans have been multicultural for centuries. The different dynasties tolerated the mix of religions, languages ​​and traditions. The photographs in the book show seemingly casual everyday situations, but why 15 years after the Kosovo war is still the ruined Ministry of Defense in Belgrade? Why are over 2,000 new monuments in Skopje?

Only since the collapse of the Yugoslav Republic have nationalist forces established marginal differences as a pattern of separation. The most serious example of a nationalist reinterpretation is language. Serbo-Croatian has been a language with a grammatical system since the 18th century. Following the collapse of Yugoslavia, the successor states developed new names for politically motivated reasons: Croatian, Serbian, Bosnian and Montenegrin. These can not be defined linguistically as mutually independent languages. Rather, it is about slightly different realizations of a macro language and thus de facto the same language system—Serbo-Croat.

Publisher: Slanted Publishers
Design: Lars Harmsen
Photographer: Dirk Gebhardt
Publication: June 2019
Volume: 120 pages, 58 photographs
Format: 15 × 21.5 cm
Language: English
Edition: 500, numbered and signed
Execution: hardcover, rubber band
ISBN: 978-3-9818296-4-8
Price: 29,90 Euro

Buy here

Get Closer

Closer is a game, yet it’s anything but competition. The only thing you can win is time well spent together, new friends honest stories and occasional giggles.

At a time when everything is super-fast, super-shared and super-connected, let’s take a deep breath together and talk to each other. At a time defined by selfies, by me, me, me, myself and I, let’s talk about us.

While it looks merely like a game, Closer is designed to be much more than that—and the choice is entirely yours. Closer can be about your memories, your stories, your past, your aspirations, your future.

Closer is a connection booster: it’s like a paper book in the age of Kindles, it is like a green tree in a concrete parking lot, it is like a good heart to heart chat in a world full of emails. It will make you listen, laugh and love a little more.

Closer

Idea and Design: Lateral
Price: 45.– US$
Buy

DESIGN{H}ERS—A celebration of women in design today

When we published Slanted Magazine #12—Beat That If You Can, we wanted to provide a platform for the great work of  women in the design field. Although there is still a long way to go until we reach true equality in the creative industry and beyond, the last few years have been encouraging for ladies all around the world. In celebrating the here and now, viction:ary is proud to present DESIGN(H)ERS— a stunning visual time capsule that captures the diversity and distinct aesthetics with which women make a special and lasting impression in their respective design fields today.

Featuring a foreword by Roanne Adams of RoAndCo Studio and cover stories on Jessica Walsh from Sagmeister & Walsh, Verònica Fuerte of HEY, Yah-Leng Yu of Foreign Design Policy Group, and renowned illustrator Hattie Stewart, the book inspires with intriguing glimpses into the portfolios and minds of 31 luminaries at the top of their game, as we aspire to a future where success is no longer defined by gender.

Interviews and work by Anna Kuts & Sevilya Nariman-qizi @ Razöm, Asuka Watanabe, AWATSUJI design, Beci Orpin, Birgit Palma, Camille Walala, Carolina Cantante & Catarina Carreiras @ Studio AH—HA, Charry Jeon @ CFC, Elaine Ramos @ UBU, Eva Dijkstra @ Design by Toko, Hattie Stewart, Jess Bonham, Jessica Hische, Jessica Walsh @ Sagmeister & Walsh, Leslie David, Leta Sobierajski, Lotta Nieminen, Louise Mertens, Lu Ihwa @ O.OO, Maricor/Maricar, Morag Myerscough, Olimpia Zagnoli, Roanne Adams @ RoAndCo, Shyama Golden, Susanna Nygren Barrett @ The Studio, Sylwana Zybura @ CROSSLUCID, Tina Touli, Vanessa Eckstein @ Blok Design, Verònica Fuerte @ Hey, Yu Qiongjie @ Transwhite Studio, Yu Yah-Leng @ Foreign Policy Design Group

Publisher: viction:ary
Curation, Design, Editing: Sauman Wong, YuetLin Lim, Katherine Wong, Leanne Lee
Concept and art direction: Victor Cheung
Release: March 2019
Volume: 272 pages
Format: 18.5 cm × 25 cm
Language: English ISBN: 978-988-79033-2-1
Price: EUR 33.79 / USD 39.95

We give away 4 books! To participate in the raffle, write an email with the subject “Design(h)ers” until June 25, 2019, 11 am (UTC+1) to [email protected]. The winner will be drawn after the deadline and contacted by email. Whoever takes part in the raffle agrees to receive news from Slanted and accepts the data protection regulations. The legal recourse is excluded. We wish you good luck!

No Plastic Water

Everyone is talking about the plastification of the ocean, but no matter how many images, awareness campaigns are out there, people keeps buying products in plastic recipients, water in plastic bottles, food, etc.

No Plastic Water is a new water that starts the fight against plastic in the point of sale. A powerful message within the name of the product, that transforms the package into a sign of protest.

“When you see the cans amongst hundreds of branded plastic bottles at the supermarket, you realize that No Plastic Water is not only a product, but a clear call to action. The product itself is a medium of advertising,” says Mauricio Alarcon, ECD of Brooklyn-based agency Conquistadors. The message “No Plastic Water” is also engraved in morse code on the front of the can, as a sign of urgent help.

No Plastic Water, is a new mineral water created for ocean lovers. This 100% recycle can contains 100% pure, mineral water. Launched in Spain and France this month.

Aluminium recycles forever without losing properties. In fact, 74% of all aluminium produced in the world is still in use, versus 95% of all plastic. Plastic bottles can be recycled two or three times, no more. 80% of marine garbage is plastic. If this doesn’t stop, there will be more plastic than fish in the ocean by 2050.

“The ocean can’t wait. We need to dramatically reduce our plastic consumption,” says Santi Mier, CEO and Founder of Barcelona-based startup Ocean52, a company that has created a range of drinks with minerals from the deep ocean. The 52% of their profits are invested into ocean protection. The company encourages people to drink tap water, and offers the product only as an alternative in the case they can’t drink from the tap.

No Plastic Water

Client: Ocean52
Agency: Conquistadors, New York
Creative Director: Mauricio Alarcon
Designers: Simone Fabricius, Gabi Guiard, Frank Guzzone

Crossfit

Crossfit is a condensed bold headline font family designed by Anita Jürgeleit. With its fresh and aesthetic appeal, it suits contemporary designs with a strong but friendly personality. Crossfit shows a charismatic variation between its thin and heavy styles, while each weight underscores an exciting composition that gives your design pure power.

The well-crafted styles are suitable for large sizes and titles such as big movie posters, advertisements or editorial headlines. Crossfit is designed to take your demanding designs about adventures, sports, blockbusters and challenges to the next level. Its determined stability transforms your creation into a indisputable design. Thanks to its rounded corners, it is also friendly and gives your creation an irresistable charme.

With 498 characters, Crossfit supports 90 latin languages. Crossfit comes with 7 weights from thin to heavy plus a free heavy italic style. Free demo versions are also available.

Single Styles: $24
Full Family: $95
50% Off until end of June.

Buy here!

SIGNALS

Production Type, the digital type design agency founded by Jean-Baptiste Levée in 2014, celebrates its fifth anniversary with an exhibition and several publications which underline the craft’s contemporaneity and its anchoring in the current design landscape. For Jean-Baptiste Levée, design is first and foremost about creating a social link.

With a yearly habit of gathering friends, collaborators, clients, contributors and typophiles around a new typeface or a new publication, this time he blends it all around 5 years of adventure, creation and collaboration in a place which welcome the team’s state of mind: Le Floréal Belleville. SIGNALS regroups the first monographic exhibition of the foundry as well as the presentation of Julien Lelièvre’s Art d’autoroute photographic project, in a single place.

Exhibition in co-production with Maison de la Culture Amiens, within the frame of their 2020 collaboration.

Typeface release
June 11th, 2019, 4 p.m.
Production Type’s latest typeface will be released on June 11th, 2019.

Book launch
June 14th, 2019, 6 p.m.
Art d’autoroute by Julien Lelièvre is the pinacle of a photographic census of highway art spanning over 10 years of survey. In presence of the artist.

Party
June 14th, 2019, 6 p.m.
There will be food, music and drinks. Bring your best self and celebrate with Production Type. Go to Facebook event page.

Type specimen launch
June 14th, 2019, 6 p.m.
As a bonus to the typeface release and the book launch, come and get a copy of a limited edition of latest type publication of Production Type.

When?
Exhibition:
 June 14th until July 4th, 2019

Where?
Floréal Belleville
43, rue des Couronnes
75020 Paris
France

 

 

Studio Simone Post: Colorful textile design for Vlisco

In February we travelled to Rwanda for a special issue of Slanted Magazine to take a look at the burgeoning creative and fashion scene. The colourful fabrics from which the beautiful dresses and shirts of the Rwandans are made also caught our eye. At the market in Kigali you can see and buy hundreds of these fabrics—the textile industry is flourishing because the import of clothes from the West has been banned.

Many of the fabrics are made by a Dutch company called Vlisco, always inspired by Africa, made with an Indonesian batik technique, designed and produced in the Netherlands—a multicultural melting pot for beauty and industrial craftsmanship. Looking for an answer to the question of who designs such patterns, we came across Simone Post, a Dutch textile and product designer whose work is characterised by material experiments, intensive research and a love of colour, printing and craftsmanship. She has just published some interesting patterns for Vlisco and she gave us a few insights on how it came to that:

What is your background?

I am a textile and product designer, graduated with honors from the Design Academy Eindhoven in 2015. Directly after graduating I have set up my own studio. I work primarily in cooperation with companies, brands and industries, to find ways to turn their rejected, left-over or waste materials into new products with high quality standards.

My grandma (96) has always been making her own clothes. The Vlisco (1846) factory is close from where she lives and already knows the factory since she was a little girl. When I started working there, she visit the design department, which was really special, she was so proud and got a Vlisco textiles where she made her own dress off.

How did your cooperation with Vlisco start?

I did an internship at Vlisco as a print designer. For my graduation project I started to work with the rejected misprinted textiles of Vlisco, I designed carpets made of textiles that otherwise would have been destroyed. Ever since this project I have had a very close relationship with Vlisco, we started developing the carpets, but at the same time I have always kept on designing prints for them.

The process of learning to design patterns for Vlisco is very intense and meticulous. Because of the wax printing technique there are limitations in the drawing where you should be aware of, but also once you are more aware of that you will also get to see the possibilities and you can really use the quality of the wax in your designs. I remember when doin my internship for examples the first few weeks I was only doing tests how you could color an existing print in different ways. Because the process of printing the textiles is very expensive you will try to make many color variations on 1 print and try to make them all look very different.

What kind of patterns are you interested in?

Over the past years, I have been designing several wax prints for Vlisco, the Dutch manufacturer of distinctive fabrics that are made with time-honoured methods and materials and loved by African women ever since they were introduced to the African market in 1846. Although the patterns are designed in The Netherlands, they come to life in Africa where traders and costumers name them and give them special meanings. Therefore, the designer must ensure the pattern contains enough ingredients to create a story. New designs are produced each year alongside traditional classics. Vlisco’s highly expressive and creative customers transform the fabrics into fashionable looks, which are truly one of a kind.

For me It is always very important that there’s the print triggers imagination and has a story to it. For example the one with the Kauri shells: When I was looking at traditional arts and crafts from West-Africa I often saw cowry shells being used. I found out that Cowry shells have been an ancient means of payment in many parts of the world, including West-Africa. Vlisco is also know as the Prada of Africa. If you look closely you can see that this new Vlisco print is created entirely from entangled cowry shells. With these colorful patterns, you will be wearing a fortune.      

We raffle 2 fabrics from Vlisco, Vlisco Wax Cowry Print and Vlisco Wax Tweed Design, each 5.5 m long among our readers. To participate in the raffle, write an email with the subject “Vlisco Wax” and the desired fabric until June 19, 2019, 11 am (UTC+1) to [email protected]. The winner will be drawn after the deadline and contacted by email. Whoever takes part in the raffle agrees to receive news from Slanted and accepts the data protection regulations. The legal recourse is excluded. We wish you good luck!

Vlisco Wax VLW4137 Cowry PrintCowry shells have been an ancient means of payment in many parts of the world, including West-Africa. If you look closely you can see that this new Vlisco print is created entirely from entangled cowry shells. With these colourful patterns, you will be wearing a fortune. 

Vlisco Wax VLW1191.003 TWEED DESIGNTwo different patterns intertwine to resemble a hand-loom. They compose a timeless zigzag design inspired by ‘tweed’ which is as warm as it is elegant

At Vlisco online shop you can purchase the textiles directly.

The Open End 2019 – Recap

Last Saturday The Open End Creativity Festival took place in the Rotondes in Luxembourg, a beautiful location used for many cultural events. The festival, which presents local and international creatives from the fields of graphic design, motion design and illustration, is organised by The End Collective and included an exhibition of modern art, book shop, live illustration, exciting lectures and an after-party with good music. And all this with free admission.

Speakers
Lynn Harles (LU/DE) | transdisciplinary design, research
Michel Welfringer (LU/BE) | graphic and editorial design, typography
Skill Lab (LU) | motion design, film, photography
Julia Kahl, Slanted Publishers / Slanted Blog Magazine (DE) | publishing and media house, magazine
Musketon and friends (BE) | illustration, visual art
FOREAL (DE) | art direction, animation, illustration

Exhibition with works by
Yliana Paolini, Kaiwa, Vincent Genco-Russo, Patrick Hallé, Jo Malano, Laurent Schmit, Martine Pinnel, Jeff Poitiers, Alain Welter, Mik Muhlen, Julie Wagener, Al Reinert, Kodji, Giamba, Lynn Theisen, Oh Mamie, Mike Z, Gianmarco, George Heartwork, Kousca, Anne Mélan, Henri Schoetter, Lionel Demarville, Dan Sinnes, Foreal, Hideyuki Katsumata, Alexander Peifer, Steffi Zepp, Annick Kieffer, Christophe Peiffer, Rick Tonizzo

We were very happy to be part of The Open End and can warmly recommend the festival to all creative people!

the-open-end.com

A’ Design Awards & Competition—Winners announced

Under the motto “Ars Futura Cultura”, i.e. “Art for the Culture of the Future”, the A’ Design Award took place and honored 2437 winners from 106 countries in 98 different design disciplines. “We believe that the future is shaped by art, design and technology, so good design is needed for a better future,” said the initiators.

You’ll find all the winning works in the online gallery, but we’d like to introduce you to a few selected works here (see the chronological pictures in the picture column):

Reading Goethes Faust by Tatjana Medvedev
A modular book consisting of 10 booklets, each with a different reading direction.

Power of Play by Mina Lynn Sohn
A colourful event design, inspired by toy shapes.

Museum of Illusions by Dragan Vejnovic
A CI for the Museum of Illusions, which also graphically plays with illusion and reality.

Gravity Cat by Yukiko Kuribayashi
This construct redefines gravity.

Project EGG by Michiel van der Kley
The project is the largest community 3D print object to date – impressive!

Bullet + Stone by Joseph Di Benedetto
An exceptional collection of door handles that plays with the materiality of metal and concrete.

Souryu Sake by Yoshiki Uchida
Sake Packaging Design with focus on the visualization of water, the most important element in the production of the Japanese beverage.

LIFEWTR Series 6 by PepsiCo
Brand design for a creative platform.

Binh by Ian Wallace
A coffee package that changes its colour all the time.

7UP Egypt by PepsiCo
This special edition shows the creative, diverse Egyptian culture.

Studio by Wim Dijksterhuis
Colourful animation for the STUDIO i, the platform for integrative culture of the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam.

PosterLad by Vratislav Pecka
An ongoing poster project that originated in Prague in 2016.

WKS Group by CRENEO
Very nicely designed environmental statement.

Science is O2 by VISANG
A workbook for students that conveys knowledge through sophisticated graphics.

Vanke Town Sales Office by Kirin Wetland
An impressive building, which is located on a wetland and represents a successful symbiosis between building and nature.

Chinese Spirit 18 Neo-Chinese by Kaishan
Inspired by Chinese painting and the asymmetrical structure of the label, a unique label is created.

Found Awareness by Chris Slabber
Exciting composings from photographs taken through a microscope.

Eye Candy by Mathew Guido
Inspired by Rembrandt’s lighting mood, this photo series was taken in the dark with neon light reflected in the glasses.

Le Morne Lunch Box by Jeffrey Wan You Sew
A fancy, thoughtful lunch box that adapts.

You can find more information about the A Design Award here. If you want to apply for the competition, you can register here.

100 best posters 18—Germany, Austria, Switzerland

From June 14 to July 7, 2019, the exhibition 100 Best Posters 18 will take place in the special exhibition hall of the Kulturforum Potsdamer Platz, Matthäikirchplatz, 10785 Berlin. Opening: 13th June 2019, 19:30!

646 submitters participated in the competition with a total of 2,353 posters. The jury with Prof. Anette Lenz (F Paris, chair), Anna Haas (CH Zurich), Astrid Seme (A Vienna), Johanna Siebein and Prof. Andrea Tinnes (both D Berlin) made an online pre-selection. The final jury session included 695 posters (294 individual posters and 117 series) of 251 submitters (105 of them from Germany, 129 from Switzerland and 17 from Austria).

By country, the prize-winning 100 posters are divided into 42 × Germany, 54 × Switzerland and 4 × Austria—in categories A (commissioned work): 83, B (own assignments): 4 and C (student project assignments): 13. You can see all winning posters online.

Exhibition tour and yearbook
After the inaugural exhibition with the publication of all posters in the new yearbook, which will be published by Verlag Kettler, D Dortmund, the 100 best posters will subsequently be displayed in D-Essen, CH-La Chaux-de-Fonds, CH-St.Gallen, CH-Lucerne, D-Karlsruhe, CH-Lausanne, A-Vienna and CH-Zurich (more places in preparation).

Animated posters
With the support of the Artivive App, available for iOS and Android, exhibition visitors can activate animated versions as moving posters for some of winning designs, as by focusing the corresponding illustrations in the yearbook.

General information on the competition and the comprehensive online archive of all posters since 2001 can be accessed at 100-beste-plakate.de

Europe—go out and vote!

Even though the European elections are already over, we would like to draw your attention to a self-initiated project initiated by the communication design students Johannes Keßler and Alexander Staudt from the Augsburg University of Applied Sciences.

The two students noticed in several discussions on campus how important the role of a unified Europe is not only for the countries themselves, but also for the life and development of the students. Through the Erasmus funding programmes, there is the opportunity to apply for a semester abroad at partner universities all over Europe and get many different, new and interesting insights and influences. This is not only important in the development of a designer.

Due to England’s withdrawal from the EU, there will probably be no more Erasmus support for semesters abroad from Great Britain and therefore fewer foreign students will study at German universities. So Johannes and Alex came up with the idea to start the voter participation project on their campus. It is intended to encourage students to reflect and to show them how important a unified and common Europe can be and what advantages EU citizens have.

In an attempt not to express political opinions or convictions, the two decided to quote Pope Francis, who pointed out Europe’s special characteristics: “Creativity, spirit, the ability to rise up again and to go beyond one’s own borders are part of Europe’s soul”. – Pope Francis, 2016

In addition to a flag triptych, the contemporary design includes a strictly limited, screen-printed series of T-shirts. The project was supported by Camelot Typefaces.

EVERYTHING FOR YOU, OH EUROPE!

Bauhaus 4.0 meets communication design & illustration

Aren’t designers always authors in editorial design? How does digitalization change the tension between editors, journalists and designers? Isn’t truth now a question of perspective and which kind of responsibility does illustration, photography and magazine design have? Does the Bauhaus help us to develop an attitude?

At the panel discussion on 13 June 2019 in Dortmund we will discuss the democratic potential of design in times of digitalization in a pointed and provocative way. Among others with the editorial designer and Professor Rüdiger Quass von Deyen, the draughtsman Raban Ruddigkeit, the editor of the design magazine Slanted, Lars Harmsen, Professor Andine Müller. Special Guest is the illustrator Tim Weiffenbach. Moderation: Boris Kochan and Ulrich Müller.

An evening on a small scale for designers, clients and those interested in design in the paper warehouse of Freytag & Petersen GmbH & Co. KG – we would like to discuss this with you! The greeting will be given by Annika Siems, member of the board of the illustrator organisation Annika Siems, and Claudia Jericho, managing director of CREATVE.NRW.

Tickets at doo.net

Thursday, 13 June 2019 | 18:30 | Dortmund
In the paper warehouse of Freytag & Petersen GmbH & Co. KG
Overhoffstraße 50, 44149 Dortmund, Germany

BAUHAUS 4.0: The future is made of design!
Ten panel discussions 2019
A series of events organised by the member organisations of the Deutscher Designtag e.V. on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the Bauhaus in conjunction with the IGEPA Group.

Interview with Assaf Benharroch

In this series we introduce you to the most exciting Israeli creative minds in graphic design, animation and illustration. Last time we introduced the illustrator Amit Trainin, more will follow. But now Israel’s most eco-friendly illustrator, Assaf.

Assaf Benharroch (sometimes written Ben-Arush) was born in 1978 in Kibbutz Sde Boker. He is now an illustrator, designer, and motion designer. He is also a partner and art director at Studio Poink in Tel Aviv, an animation studio which he runs with Lynn Polyak. Their creations include info videos, commercials, and music videos. They created the animated film “All actual life is encounter”  (written by Irit Federman) which was part of the Official Selection of Le Petit Cannes at the Cannes 2018 Film Festival. Assaf has provided illustrations for The New York Times and Israeli newspapers Yedioth Ahronoth and Haaretz. He graduated from Minshar School of Art in Tel Aviv in 2008 and now teaches digital illustration at Shenkar College of Engineering and Design in Ramat Gan. He lives with his wife and three children at Kibbutz Gal-On.

How do you divide your working week between giving classes, studio work, and family life?

Most days I work from home and communicate with my studio partner and freelancers over the Internet. I like it that way because I like my garden and enjoy working alone, and I love being with my kids a lot. I also like the idea that it’s greener not to drive to work every day. So, once or twice a week I take the train to Tel Aviv to work in my studio. Also, once a week I am cultivating a small vegetable and fruit tree plot. I teach a course at Shenkar College every year in the first semester. I teach digital illustration and I love it.

Which current project are you most passionate about?

I am working on a short animation about regenerative agriculture. In recent years I have been worried about the overexploitation of our natural world. It’s a topic I’m investigating and I’m very interested in. I got to know this kind of agriculture, which gives me much more hope for the future than any other solution found so far in terms of global warming and other ecological damage. This project is a big challenge because I am not a farmer or a scientist. I have recently received funding for this project, so I am very excited about it. My dream is to make it a TV series that presents different solutions to the global crisis. I think that most people do nothing to improve the situation because they are overwhelmed by the frightening information and do not believe that it is in their power to turn things around.

Why are so many Israeli illustrators lecturers?

It is extremely difficult to live from illustration in Israel. Teaching is a good opportunity because there are so many students.

Would you rather make more newspaper illustrations or more music videos?

I like both very much.

Which artists have you worked with and learned from?

I love the British comic artist Jon McNaught. I don’t know him personally, but he influenced me a lot. Naive art is also a great source of inspiration. I love Henri Rousseau, Frida Kahlo, and Gary Bunt.

Are there forms of nature (like plants, animal world, clouds) that you would like to study for creative inspiration?

Very much! Nature is my greatest influence and teacher. I love the patterns and chaos in nature.
Assaf has developed handmade geometric stamps, brushes and other digital tools for Adobe Photoshop. You can download them here.

More about Assaf Benharroch here.

Children’s books from the Kunstanstifter Verlag: Polka für Igor, Schnorchelnde Schafe, Wilmas Mäusejagd & Hoch hinaus

In search of beautifully illustrated children’s books, we became aware of the Kunstanstifter Verlag, which was founded in 2006 as a publishing house for illustration. The portfolio today consists almost exclusively of picture books for adults and children, the quality of the book illustration is the most important criterion for inclusion in the program. In the following we present four books (in German language) that we liked very much:

Iris Anemone Paul: Polka für Igor

Igor is a special dog. If you take the time to listen to old Polka records with him, you will enjoy listening to exciting stories.

At that time in Poland Igor was a hero. Ola knows that. As soon as the needle on the record begins to scratch, Igor gets into a flurry. And so the two of them travel through his past on an armchair: with casserole and sauerkraut, tightrope walkers, as tender as turkey schnitzel, with Russian recorder players, Bengali tigers and sheep smelling of cuckooflower—accompanied by accordion sounds and a crackling fireplace.

The book is also available as a special edition, with a limited screenprint signed by the artist. You can buy one of 30 silkscreen prints with book for 60 €.

ISBN: 978-3-942795-70-8 and 978-3-942795-72-2 (Special Edition)
Book design: Franziska Walther
Format: 300 × 290 mm
Scope: 48 pages
ET: March 2018
Price: € 24,–
Hardcover with dust jacket, printing in four special colors

 

Anne Marie Braune: Schnorchelnde Schafe und andere Tierhobbys

Have you ever wondered what whales do in their spare time or can you imagine that hamsters like to play chess? Who hides among the snorkeling sheep?

The colorful world of fantastic animal hobbies is just waiting to be discovered by you. Join us on this lively explorer safari and don’t miss out on a lively crawling animal!

ISBN: 978-3-942795-62-3
Format: 224 × 268 mm
Scope: 32 pages
Release date: 2018
Price: € 19,–
Hardcover with dust jacket and poster

 

Liliane Steiner: Wilmas Mäusejagd

Wilma’s a hungry cat. She walks through forest and town to find something to eat. The search is not quite easy, because the mice quickly scurry away … and suddenly, ouch … what is that? Wilma always encounters new surprises.

The illustrations with color schemes by Liliane Steiner conceal the unexpected. A huge search pleasure for children—secretly but also for adults.

ISBN: 978-3-942795-49-4
size: 30 × 19,5 cm
Scope: 28 pages
Release date: 2017
Price: € 22,–
Hardcover, Japanese binding and magnifying glass

Franziska Walther: Hoch hinaus

Moose also have wanderlust and so Erasmus sets off to discover the world. He crosses mountains, walks through fields and forests, dives into the sea—and one day reaches the city. So many people, houses and cars, so much unknown and exciting! But suddenly Erasmus finds himself in a situation that seems hopeless.

How the young moose succeeds in overcoming his own limits is the subject of this encouraging picture story, which Franziska Walther stages, sometimes in large format, sometimes sequentially in poetic images. After her illustrated novels “Peter Schlemihl’s wundersame Geschichte,” “Der Zeitsparer,” and the 2016 graphic novel “Werther Reloaded,” “Hoch hinaus” is her first picture book.

ISBN: 978-3-942795-61-6
size: 21,3 × 28 cm
Length: 40 pages
Release date: 2017
Price: € 22,–
Hardcover with partial metallic embossing

Posterheroes: A Poster for Integration

This is the eighth edition of the contest of posters promoted by the Italian cultural association PLUG and FAVINI the leading global producer of innovative graphics specialties for the packaging of products.

The topic of the edition of 2019 is social integration. How important are the notions of migration and diversity for a nation? What do we mean when we talk about fighting the fear of immigrants? Starting from these questions, the organizers of the contest aim at sparking a global dialogue.

Like the previous editions, the creative community is mustered to express its message through a 70 × 100 cm poster. This year’s big news is the possibility to participate in the contest also with a kinetic poster, beside the traditional one. A kinetic poster is a motion graphic design artwork. The motion elements could be related to the typography, to the visual part (images, shapes, colors) or to the layout. Participants will have the chance to submit on www.posterheroes.org their poster and/or kinetic poster from April 8th until June 16th, 2019, doing their best to express their opinion on welcoming and integration.

Among the news of this edition there will be an exhibition of the selected posters and kinetic posters at Torino Graphic Days 4, the international festival of visual design that will be held in Italy (3rd to 6th October, 2019, Turin). Like last year, the first classified of the each category (traditional and kinetic poster) will win a cash prize of 2.500 Euro.

Take place in the competition and get more information here.