White Forest by
Juhee Han
Have you ever heard of the white rainforest? Imagine a white rainforest, wouldn’t that be beautiful? The earth has a forest that has turned white. Here white means death. It is called the rainforest of the sea, and it is a living organism that is rapidly disappearing in more and more areas today. Not everyone can see that easily, you are looking at it now. This story about the sea, which is hard to see, is right in front of you. It is a story that begins in the sea and ends in the sea.
Since the first personal computer came into this world in the 1980s, there have already been three generations of the World Wide Web. Web standards have continuously evolved, and graphical user interfaces surround us everywhere on various devices. Most human computer interactions and the resulting interfaces are not designed with a cultural mission in mind, but defined by the five largest, most dominant, and most prestigious companies in the information technology industry. By studying visual and structural constraints that we are facing through predefined interaction surfaces, and the standards, norms, influences and styles that have been established, each student designed a typeface and its habitat on this website.
Participating students
Niklas Weisenbach ↘ HMT John Weber ↘ Anomalie Juhee Han ↘ White Forest Michele Sablone ↘ Hypersonic Emre Kızıldelioğlu ↘ Sync Moritz Schneider ↘ What Do You Recognize? Joel Luca Sequeira Ferreira ↘ Modern Balance Sophie Eckhardt ↘ Four Tones Saara Kuum ↘ Mildewy Tizian Repp ↘ Wetlands Felix Harr ↘ ReditusThis website was programmed by Simon Knebl.
The Habitat of a Typeface Today was a seminar at the Communication Department of Karlsruhe University of Arts and Design in the summer semester of 2022 supervised by Katharina Köhler.
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