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Opinion:
Agenda
Modernity and tradition by Phil Baines
Modernism tried to break with the past; traditionalists embrace it. But any kind of ism is fated to become an anachronism
Features:
Reputations: Rudy VanderLans by Julia Thrift
‘The thing we have never done at Emigre is to second guess what the audience would like or be able to comprehend’
The digital wave by Robin Kinross
The old manufacturing companies that dominated typeface production through most of this century have been swallowed and largely pushed to the sidelines, while initiatives in design – and in the terms and routines that condition design – have been made by a few rapidly growing software and computer hardware companies. Pathbreaking contributions have come from small studios or individual designers working, in every sense, from just a desktop. There have been ‘font wars’, corporate piracy and copyright contravention on a large scale. To use the loose terminology by which we attempt to carve up typographic history, it is clear that during the 1980s, the developed world left behind photographic typography (to which metal had ceded) and entered the era of the ‘digital’
Telling and selling by Steven Heller
Cooper Black is one of the emblematic typefaces of the twentieth century. Who was the man behind the face?
Type as entertainment by Rick Poynor
Why Not Associates are the wild boys of the British typographic scene … How do they get away with it?
High and low (a strange case of us and them?) by Ellen Lupton
Designers take a superior view of vernacular typography. Is it time to come down from on high?
Reviews
The Form of the Book: Essays on the Morality of Good Design

Details

Linked Information

Eye, Issue 007, Summer 1992
Eye, Issue 007, Summer 1992
More graphic design artefacts
From the design archive:
From the design archive:
From the design archive:
From the design archive:
More graphic design history articles

Members Content

Nikon commissioned Yusaku Kamekura to design numerous posters, packaging designs and advertisements for Nikon. His used abstract forms, an impactful use of colours, along with his skilful reduction of messaging.

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The typographic supplement from Der Druckspiegel, October, 1961 features typographic compositions designed by Herbert Bossin. Bossin has solely used the typeface Folio, to illustrate its flexibility and versatility alongside imagery provided by Lothar Blanvalet Verlag.

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His distinctive style echoes the artistic expressions of fellow Italian designers Giovanni Pintori and Erberto Carboni. Tovaglia's mastery in taking concepts and translating them into visually compelling narratives is evident in this selection of advertisements I have scanned from Gebrauchsgraphik, 10, 1955.
I have been reproached for this, and I will surely be reproached again. I have also been reproached for reading more and more obscure works whose readership must be limited to a handful of specialists and a few hobbyists like myself. It’s a heavy passion or a passion that sucks.