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poster design

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Good design doesn’t ask for your attention. It earns it. Over the years, Moss and Fog has featured thousands of pieces. Objects, spaces, images, and ideas that made us genuinely reconsider what a designed thing can do.

These seven are the type of posts that keep coming back to mind. They’re worth looking at slowly.


A Credenza With a Photorealistic Full Moon Across Its Surface

Full Moon Credenza by Giorgio Bonaguro

Italian designer Giorgio Bonaguro made 24 of these. Each carries a photorealistic moon printed directly onto the wood surface, backlit using ELI (Eco Light Inside) technology so it appears to glow from within. It’s one of those pieces that stops a room conversation dead the moment someone notices it. Furniture that commits to something strange and pulls it off completely.

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Terra Cotta Containers That Are Actually Beautiful

Four modern, terracotta-colored ceramic vessels with simple shapes and gray tops, arranged on a smooth surface against a light gray background.

Terra cotta has been making containers for roughly eight thousand years. Designer Benjamin Hubert decided to see what contemporary form-thinking could do with that ancient material.

The result is four container typologies that feel simultaneously very old and very new, the kind of objects you put on a shelf and then find yourself looking at more than you expected.

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Famous Movie Posters Stripped to Their Geometric Minimum

Minimalist poster for the movie Superman featuring a blue background with a diagonal red stripe and text listing the cast, crew, and production details.

Designer Michal Krasnopolski removed every recognizable element from famous movie posters until only the essential geometry and color remained. What’s quietly interesting is how many of them still function as posters.

You can still tell what film it is. That’s not a coincidence β€” it’s design theory in action, whether he intended it as a demonstration or not.

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Beverage Can Redesigns Almost Too Good to Throw Away

Beverage Can Redesigns

A good packaging redesign does one thing well: it makes you pick the thing up. These can concepts from several studios treat the humble aluminum cylinder as a genuine graphic design problem worth serious attention.

The Coke sharing can splits into two cups. The Russian beer cans are hand-illustrated. All of them make the standard supermarket shelf look like it’s not trying.

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3D-Printed Bowties That Are Wearable Geometric Sculptures

A black bow tie with a unique lattice design and solid center section, displayed on a light-colored surface.

Tokyo studio Nervous System applied generative design algorithms to neckwear and produced bowties that look like they were pulled from a mathematical proof. Each one is unique.

Each one sits at the intersection of jewelry, sculpture, and the thing you wear to a dinner where people spend the whole evening asking where you got your bowtie. (Reminder: this post is from 12 years ago, when 3D printing was brand new.)

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A Tea House With Windows Made Entirely of Pressed Sugar

Sugar Tea House Windows

A studio in China built its tea house windows from pressed sugar panes, backlit so the interior glows amber through translucent walls that will eventually dissolve in rain.

The architects treated impermanence as a feature rather than a flaw. It’s one of the more quietly poetic architectural decisions made in recent memory, and the photographs of the light coming through are extraordinary.

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Apple’s WWDC Animation: A Quiet Masterclass in Designing With Less

An abstract graphic featuring a central black circle with radial lines extending outwards, dotted with various sizes of black and gray circles against a light background.

Apple’s WWDC opening animations are not supposed to be the main event, and yet designers end up dissecting them every year. This one from way back in 2013 shows what happens when a motion designer decides restraint is more interesting than spectacle. More negative space than movement. The kind of work that looks effortless until you sit down and try to make something similar.

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Design at its best doesn’t just solve a problem. It changes how you see the problem. These seven pieces do that in different ways.

Some through restraint, some through material strangeness, some through sheer commitment to an idea most designers would have talked themselves out of. That’s the thing worth looking for.

At age 95, designer and printmaker Kazumasa Nagai has a phenomenal eye, and huge body of impactful and beautiful work to his name.

Born in 1929, the Japanese designer was hugely instrumental in social movements in the 60s and 70s, and also created the Nippon Design Center, which he led for many years.

Dozens of his works hang in prominent art museums throughout the world, including ten in the Museum of Modern Art.

His ability to create graphical, high-impact designs made him a go-to talent for posters. Having designed over 1000 in his tenure, Nagai is widely respected inside and out of his native Japan.

Below are just a few of our favorites, and show his range and skill as a designer.

We love it when artists use their own creativity to reinterpret pop culture. Often, they leave it more inspired than when they found it, or at least find ways to show something familiar in a new and clever angle. So it is with Pete Majarich, who’s movie poster interpretations tend toward the minimalist, but still pack a narrative punch. Those familiar with the following movies will find that the alternative posters are clever and creatively showcased. Β In fact, his series is part of a wildly ambitiousΒ A Movie Poster A Day, which is exactly what you think it is, and has a huge collection of posters than run the gamut from minimalist, to complex. Cast Away shows just a simple icon of Wilson, the iconic volleyball. Thelma and Louise takes a riff on E.T., with a convertible flying over the moon. Β We’re impressed by the scope and dedication to the project, and we’ve gathered just a few of our favorites below. Via InspirationGrid:

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This series of graphical posters for the Vistula River by Polish artistΒ Ola JasionowskaΒ are visually intriguing, with a style that is reminiscent of art deco travel posters. Using a limited color palette and sleek, minimal linework, the posters are clean and elegant, showcasing people exploring the river by all manner of boats and watercraft. Check out more ofΒ Ola Jasionowska‘s work on Behance.

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Green Man Festival is an annual event in Wales that brings musicians from around the globe to the vibrant green hills of the Welsh countryside. Dutch illustratorΒ Aart-Jan Venema and agency We Are GoodnessΒ have partnered to create some super vibrant and fun posters for the festival. It’s easy to get lost in the menagerie of characters, color, and happy chaos that ensues. Β There’s something about the full frame color and funky characters that make for really compelling visual work.Β Via Behance:

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Inspirational posters are beyond tacky. They are the butt of jokes from Office Space to Geico commercials. And for good reason, they’re totally cheesy. If you liken yourself a beautiful, unique butterfly, maybe you hold them in a different regard. Notebook maker Baron Fig is trying to make inspirational posters cool in their seriesΒ The Poster Project. And with the right balance of cool design and smart quotes from people who matter, I think they just might succeed. Via FastCo Design:
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Some bold posters for the New York City Opera, which most certainly won’t get lost in the jumble. Daniel Forkin has created some eye-catching stuff here. Via DesignBoom:Β Β 
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