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Siege Magazine returns to champion a new era of artist-led collaboration

Creative Boom

After a six-year hiatus, Siege Magazine (SiegeMag) is making a comeback with a refreshed mission to build a more inclusive, artist-driven platform and a call to the creative community to help bring it to life. Inclusivity wasn't just a theme – it was the magazine's foundation – and that spirit extended to SiegeMag's playful experimentation.

Magazine 377
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50 fonts that will be popular with designers in 2025

Creative Boom

Designer Fred Smeijers' first commercial typeface, released in 1992, was fully remastered in 2019 and re-hinted to meet the demands of today's digital technology. It was designed in the summer of 2010 by Warsaw-based designer Łukasz Dziedzic ('lato' means summer in Polish) and has since been published under the open-source Open Font License.

Fonts 540
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Amazing Illustrations Artwork by Ethem Onur Bilgic

Graphic Design Junction

He produced cover and theme illustrations for magazines and book covers for publishing houses. In 2019, he was featured in TASCHEN’s THE ILLUSTRATOR – 100 Best From Around The World. He studied Graphic Design in Mimar Sinan Fine Arts University. He started to create poster designs for various festivals.

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10 brilliant illustrators you should have on your radar

Creative Boom

Her VR animation projects have been exhibited at a number of exhibitions, including the China International Import Expo in 2019, and her list of global clients includes Apple, Google, Facebook, Gucci, Starbucks, Tencent, Alibaba and McDonald's. Work by Jiawen Chen 5. Work by Katherine Lam 6. Work by Laomo Wang 7.

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Top 10 Times New Roman alternatives for designers

Creative Boom

Across the nine decades since, Times has been hugely popular worldwide, from newspapers to desktop publishing software. Designed by Jose Mendoza y Almeida in 1971 and published by Monotype, Photina was created specifically for phototypesetting, the technology that preceded digital and laser typesetting. Monticello by Matthew Carter.

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Ekta: 160 Faces by Lundgren+Lindqvist

BP&O

Text by Richard Baird 160 Faces is a new publication from Swedish artist Daniel Götesson working under the name Ekta, designed by Lundgren+Lindqvist and distributed under the studio’s publishing arm ll’Editions. The post Ekta: 160 Faces by Lundgren+Lindqvist appeared first on BP&O - Branding, Packaging and Opinion.

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Simon Case: AI will destroy jobs, but there's a silver lining that could save your career

Creative Boom

After all, when I entered my profession in the 1990s, working on London-based entertainment and women's magazines, each title employed around 50-100 people. He draws parallels to previous technological shifts, such as the desktop publishing revolution, which decentralised the industry. "AI