Typography Mania #172

Typography Mania #172

Typography Mania is a weekly post series that comes around once a week with the best of Typography design works on the web, from type videos to images everything is full of great design and typography inspiration. Users can submit their typography designs.

Click here to check out all the previous Typography Mania

Make sure to click on each image to go to original location where you can check out more work from each artist and designer.

Submit your Typography work

From now on you can submit your typography mania piece by adding your image to Abduzeedo’s Flickr Group and use the tag Typography. I will search through and handpick the best pieces every week.

Images


Typography Mania #172
Submitted by TIPOCALI


Typography Mania #172
Submitted by Solo 71


Typography Mania #172
Submitted by -MICFRA-


Typography Mania #172
Submitted by .kiri


Typography Mania #172
Submitted by Michael Spitz


Typography Mania #172
Submitted by Jackson Alves


Typography Mania #172
Submitted by Michael Rubini


Typography Mania #172
Submitted by Sean Kane Design


Typography Mania #172
Submitted by Sean Kane Design


Typography Mania #172
Submitted by Michael Rubini


Typography Mania #172
Submitted by ecerdeiros

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Amazing mirror images

ThumbnailThe Rorschach test is the most widely used projective psychological test, designed to assess and identify personality structures. But while photographer Traci Griffin’s brilliant new series titled “Mirrors” bears some resemblance to an inkblot test, her aim is entirely different — namely, to show that exact symmetry cannot be found in nature.

Starting from this vantage point, Griffin spent nearly four years photographing branches, trees, fields, and even human hair to create these haunting images. By photographing natural objects and then splicing them together, the perfectly symmetrical effect — appearing elevated in mid-air — juxtaposes the steady predictability of symmetry with the jarring, off-kilter sense of suspension.

Perhaps the closest Rorschach resemblance in Traci Griffin’s work is simply this: viewers of the images will see what they want to see in each shot. Some will find the series calming; others will find it unsettling. But in the end, it’s largely the opportunity for personal interpretation that successfully raises the work to art.

 

Do you find these images calming or disturbing? Do you use symmetry in your own work? Let us know in the comments.

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