The Fashion Group International of St. Louis teamed up with Alive Magazine’s Saint Louis Fashion week to produce, “Fresh” a runway fashion show and luncheon featuring up and coming designers. Branding for this event included invitations, large-scale posters for the event space, programs and swag bags. The use of sewing pins to create the typographic treatment played up the hands-on aspect of fashion design and construction.
DEM HANDS. The sexy boots excuse it this time.
Poster of the Olympic torch created in honour of its passing through Vienna on its way to the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin.
Me, I just like the way the word “Österreich” looks. (Same with “Königreich Preußen.” Stupid sexy German.)
A series of poster experiments created using song lyrics and quotes to showcase some of the fonts I have been working on lately combined with some of my photography. Via Behance.
Creative Brief:
Design a typographical solution for a new club in Edinburgh. Restricted to A5 format and 4 colour process (CMYK). The club’s name will be based on one of the seven deadly sins (I picked Greed out of the Hat).
More from DA.
Hungarian poster for La Bohème.
Have I mentioned how much I like the way the Hungarian language looks on paper?
I’ve got a little list
of society-offenders who might well be underground,
and who never would be missed
I love Keep Calm and Carry On poster take-offs. The fact that this one is hand-drawn makes it even better.
The FontFont Wall Map sheds new light on the collection, making it easier to find the most suitable face among a cast of thousands.
Breaking from the tradition of alphabetical or categorical order, the poster presents the library in an organic, intuitive way. It is a cloud map of typographic forms in which fonts are organized by their visual relationship.
The word “Slang” represents the main components of the latin alphabet — uppercase, lowercase, ascender, descender, rounds, and straights. The size of each font sample is relative to the family size. A count of styles and weights is shown in the box next to the font name.






