Maarten Dullemeijer's profile

Aleph: type printed with Oxblood

Comfortable Confusion
 
"At Autobahn we work with letters and we play with their definition. Whether we’re designing an identity, website or campaign, we consider letters to be images." –Rob Stolte & Maarten Dullemijer
 
We all use letters to convey written communication. But when letters are presented as images, something strange occurs. As a reader, you have to make a decision: do I look at an image, or do I read the text? Watching and reading simultaneously is difficult. It creates a short circuit in the brain between the left and right hemispheres. It's what we call Comfortable Confusion. Combined with clear concept and dialogic design, this is our starting point for intriguing communication.
 
This method stems directly from the founders personal characters at Autobahn’s creative core. Where the one is practical, intuitive and covers the broad lines, the other is analytical, logical and detail oriented. Through discussion and exchange of ideas the two characters merge. Together they form a unique corpus based on their mentality. The result of this collaboration is notable design and intriguing communication that literally stimulates the brain of the beholder.
 
Origin of Type
 
For our 10th anniversary, we’ve created a new visual identity for ourselves. We used the first letter of our name as a starting point. Frequently we explain to people that what we do at Autobahn is best illustrated by showing how human communication in writing has developed over the years. The letter 'A' finds its origin in an Ox head around 3000 B.C. Over time, it gradually changed into the form we today recognize as the letter 'A'.
New Identity
 
Autobahn celebrates its 10th anniversary in 2015. For this special occasion, we created a new identity for the studio. In this new identity, we’ve combined the two definitions of the letter 'A'. By turning the letter around, its definition changes although its form stays the same. The Oxhead and letter 'A' are connected in a design that spans almost 5000 years. We teamed up with Ramon Goedvree from Kapitaal Utrecht to create silkscreen printed posters with real Oxblood, in an limited edition of 30.
 
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The process:
Boiling the blood thickens the structure and makes it more suitable for printing.
First tests:
Final result:
Presentation @Autobahn Gallery 29/10/2015:
The posters are for sale. please contact us for ordering options and questions about the project.
 
Oh, and mind you: the printed colors on this poster may fade over time due to organic materials...
Aleph: type printed with Oxblood
Published:

Aleph: type printed with Oxblood

For our 10th anniversary, we’ve created a new visual identity for ourselves. We used the first letter of our name as a starting point. We frequen Read More

Published: