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Slanted #15 – Experimental deals with experimental design strategies in typography and graphic design. This issue presents projects incorporating the accident into the design process, works based on mistakes and inaccuracy, fonts that derive from a concept or a system – in the end work that experiments or goes unconventional ways in design.

The playful handling of tools, forms and concept is a popular procedure to broaden the consciousness in typography. It seems to be (regarding the huge amount of entries for this issue) a widespread phenomenon, very popular at design schools and universities. This is not a surprising fact – especially in interaction with a model, experimental results are the foundation of a theory. We placed a special experimental type section with 48 pages in this issue to be able to present a large collection of typographical experiments.

Inaccuracies sometimes lead to new precision – as in this issue’s text font. The typeface Korpus has been designed by Michael Mischler and Nik Thoenen of Swiss fontlabel Binnenland. It is based on a careful analysis of inaccuracy occuring in the print image of early 20th century fonts.

This issue’s cover is realized in an oldfashioned, experimental procedure, too: Its print sheet has been produced in rainbow printing using HKS colors.

Photo series of Matthias Hubert (Dortmund), who photographed fans of the current German soccer champion, and of Ken Rosenthal (Tucson, AZ), who opens the darkroom to the experiment. The type essays of Christine Hartmann (Leipzig), Will Hill (Cambridge) and Shelley Gruendler (Galiano Island) deal with strategies of the experiment in typography. Read interviews with Peter Bi’lak (The Hague), Michael Mischler and Nik Thoenen (Berne), Martin and Thomas Poschauko (Au near Bad Aibling), Oded Ezer (Givatayim), Donald Beekman and Liza Enebis (Amsterdam) and Neville Brody (London) as well as an essay about Japanese Modernism, the 5th part of the Tokyo Report, both by Ian Lynam (Tokyo), and the next sonic travelogue by Frank Wiedemann (Berlin).





A new book documenting the making of China Granite Project II – a collection of furniture by Max Lamb realised in October 2010 using an igneous granite known as Sesame Black native to Fujian Province, China.

Published by Everyday Life Books




TEAM is a self-published journal that was made possible through collaboration. Although the submissions are varied, they are tied together by a shared sentiment, the willingness to contribute to creating an intellectually stimulating yet accessible platform for young artists, photographers, writers, and their projects. This diverse content is kept cohesive by the design of Joseph Hales. Issue One includes an interview with sound artists Variable 4, artwork by Katie Scott, a collaboration between poet Sam Riviere and illustrator Martha Ellen Smith, as well as a pull-out, riso-printed comic by Joe Kessler.

TEAM is 52 pages and printed in an edition of 200




Under The Influence Issue Nº9 — La Folie

Featuring
Victor de Mello, Thomas Lohr, Marcus Palmqvist, Benjamin Bouchet, John de Lima, Suzie Q + Leo Siboni, Steve Gullick, Stevie Chick, Jeremy Boulard, Lindsay Mackenzie, Lindsay Carroll, Kristin Hersh, Rose Kemp, Antoine D’Agata, Hanania & Brunnquell, Unica Zurn, Comme des Garçons Tribute, The Janissary Collective, and more…

216 pages — 12€ (+ P&P)

PRE-ORDER HERE


SELF SERVICE N°17
Casey Spooner, Jeffrey Deitch, Tara Subkoff, Yvonne Force Villareal
Photography: Jessica Craig-Martin


SELF SERVICE N°5
Photography: Bettina Komenda
Styling: Sabina Schreder
Model: Sarah Littasy


SELF SERVICE N°26
Chloé Sevigny
Photography: David Sims
Styling: Joe McKenna


SELF SERVICE N°28
Photography: Alasdair McLellan
Styling: Jane How
Model: Kasia Strauss


SELF SERVICE N°30
Photography: Ezra Petronio
Styling: Suzanne Koller
Model: Raquel Zimmermann


SELF SERVICE N°14
Björk
Photography: Juergen Teller
Styling: Venetia Scott

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The long-awaited launch of the new Self Service Magazine website has finally arrived. You can now browse through all the back issues -15 years of the best fashion photography. Nothing more to say really…

And for those of you who can live without an iPad, the last issue is also available over at the iTunes store.