I think it is interesting that most of these trends include many multiplied colors, gradients and even real imagery. I like that designers are pushing beyond traditional barriers that printing reproduction could cause and creating some cool designs.
(*RW)
“The work you take on can define you.”
Here’s a guide to choosing the right projects & making each one count.
(via Trent Walton)
A Dutch graphic designer and dyslexic, Christian Boer, developed a font specifically for dyslexic readers. It’s designed to make letters more distinct from each other and to keep them tied down, so to speak, so that the reader is less likely to flip them in their minds. The letters in the font are also spaced wide apart to make reading them easier.