Delegate Web

This website is now typeset in Delegate

Delegate explores the grey area between cold European Grotesks and warm American Gothics. It takes after anonymous, highly functional grotesques that manage to be invisible despite being made of idiosyncratic shapes. Delegate is a hardworking sans that takes functionalism as both a purpose and an aesthetic. Delegate was published by Commercial Type in 2024.

View Typeface ↗

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
0123456789 -–—.,:;‘’“”@%&!?#*[{()}]
₹$£¥€₹ §•¶†‡©®™ ←↑→↓↖↙↗↘

19 — Variations of a theme

Paul Kirchner is a comics artist and illustrator best known for his counterculture-era psychedelic comic strip Dope Rider, featuring a cowboy skeleton travelling through a surreal, inter-dimensional desert landscape. With lush, detailed, and complex illustrations, Dope Rider explores the infinite possibilities available when a comic is set in an undefined, surreal space. His other major work, however, explores the opposite end of the spectrum: The Bus features an unnamed character trying to hail a bus. That’s it. But even within this tiny, minute premise, Kirchner once again delves into infinite possibilities. The familiar setting is a stroke of genius, acting as a relatable anchor for the incredible experiences of the character. Truly an underrated gem.

  • Comics

18 — Markings

We love Paris. We love that all the benches in the city are always filled with people, whether reading, drawing, writing, or listening to music. It has become a bit of a joke for us how rarely we spot someone on their phone — and when we do, it’s always another tourist. Parisians are living right.

  • Travel

17 — American Landscapes

Wim Wenders’ Paris, Texas (1984) is certainly a contender for the title of the most beautiful visuals ever captured in a film. As part of his research leading up to its making, Wenders spent time driving through Texas, Arizona, New Mexico, and California, taking photographs. The images capture the desert and its small towns in all their brutal magnificence, suffused with the magical realism of the American frontier — a theme that also obsessed and influenced the great Möebius. The resulting book, Written in the West, is a must-have.

  • Books
  • Photography
  • Film

16 — Lord of the Drone

Currently listening to Pran Nath’s Ragas (1971), the defining document of the Kirana Gharana style in Hindustani classical vocal traditions. Nath was an elusive figure who mastered the style and expanded it into a hypnotic, drone-based approach that heavily influenced the avant-garde jazz and minimalist scene in New York during the 1970s. His students, La Monte Young and Marian Zazeela (who designed the stunning album cover and other posters for Nath’s shows), invited him to move to the United States, where they established the Kirana Center for Indian Classical Music in 1972. We highly recommend this insightful piece by Alexander Keefe on Nath and his influential circle.

  • Music
  • Design

15 — Don’t Skip Intro

Love, love, LOVE this title lettering for Mani Ratnam’s sophomore film Unaroo (1984). The famed Tamil director’s debut was the Kannada film Pallavi Anu Pallavi (1983), now best remembered for its memorable theme music by Ilaiyaraja. Although only a moderate hit, it earned him the opportunity to make this Malayalam sleeper hit. The film itself is nothing to write home about, but the lettering is a stand-out. It utilizes and exaggerates the defining characteristic of Malayalam script: the loops. Used to great effect with perspective, it’s just such a brilliant piece of lettering. 10/10, no notes.

  • Film
  • Lettering

14 — Long Live The New Flesh

Currently rewatching David Cronenberg’s body-horror classic Videodrome (1983), a surreal parable on the effects of mass media, propaganda, and subliminal messaging. A work of stunning beauty that defies time and narrative structure, it is as perplexing now as it was when we first watched it as young, impressionable teenagers. Also, as huge fans of Debbie Harry, we can’t help but wish she had done more films. Next up: Cronenberg’s other dystopian thriller, Scanners (1981).

  • Film

13 — Die Cuts and Pantones

We were ecstatic to discover a new reprinting of Peter Saville’s original record cover for New Order’s Blue Monday in a London record shop. The first truly electronic mega-hit, the original cover was designed to resemble a giant floppy disk, complete with die-cut details and individual Pantone colors for Saville’s color-code strip on the right. The strip is readable, based on a system he used for several New Order releases at the time. There’s an oft-repeated rumor that the cover was so expensive to produce it ended up costing Factory Records 8p per pressing. Hold this beauty in your hands and tell us it wasn’t worth it.

  • Music
  • Design

12 — Currently Reading: Beyond The Wall

Katja Foyer’s excellent book on the political and cultural history of the German Democratic Republic (GDR), or East Germany, seeks to challenge many long-held beliefs about everyday life behind the Iron Curtain. It is by no means ahistorical or myopic—it is indeed a story of mass surveillance, experiments in social conformity, and civil obedience. Yet, it is also a story of national aspirations, relative stability, and social mobility. What we love about the book is how it embraces the multitude of contradictions at the heart of this socialist experiment, starting with the nation’s name. It’s a great book—highly recommended!

  • Books
  • Culture

11 — Monumental Television

The recent passing of Tamil author Indra Sounder Rajan reminded us of his greatest work: Marmadesam (“Land of Mystery”), a cult 1990s Tamil TV series that took the state by storm. It was a radical departure from the television offerings of the time, with its complexity, depth, and darkness. On the surface, the show follows a rationalist medical student from the city who investigates a series of ritualistic murders in a small village, attributed to a local deity. Through this seemingly straightforward premise, the show delves into the core of Tamil culture and society: the conflict between tradition and modernity, rationalism versus superstition, caste, myth-making, misogyny, patriarchy, and hyper-masculinity. It was a work of incredible magnitude, intelligence, and influence that could never be replicated. Fortunately, the entire series is now available on YouTube.

  • Television
  • Culture

10 — As Seen on IG

We got to visit IDEA Books, the coolest bookstore on the internet, IRL in London. No photography was allowed, but we sneakily snapped this photo of their door. It was unsurprisingly a treasure trove: books we’d ogled at online that we could finally hold in our hands, inspect the printing, and smell the paper (OK, TMI). There were stacks and stacks of old magazines (golden-age Interview, WET, cool Japanese style magazines, LUI, etc.), along with experimental books, monographs, and incredibly rare works. We especially loved the huge collection of Comme des Garçons printed matter, designed by Inoue Tsuguya (whose super rare monograph was there, too).

  • Books
  • Travel

9 — On the “Artist Portrait”

We had our studio portraits taken by our friend Anurag Banerjee (whose new book we had the pleasure of working on recently), and it was an interesting exercise in thinking about how a portrait can best represent our studio’s ethos and work. We began thinking about studio portraits from history that we love: the Total Design one immediately comes to mind, as does the graphic one for Graphic Thought Facility. But our favorite has to be this surreal portrait by the Canadian art group General Idea. GI were pioneers in creating a model for conceptual and media-based art that engaged directly with the public—through publishing magazines, books, public installations, et al. We love that the portrait invites inquiry and references early experimental photography.

  • Art
  • Photography

8 — The Curious Globetrotter

Tibor Kalman’s insatiable curiosity about the world formed the foundation of his work. Before his untimely passing, he and his wife, the acclaimed illustrator Maira Kalman, traveled the world collecting images of the ways humans adorn themselves. Their resulting book, Un(Fashion), is a revelation. It has no page numbers, index, or any text. Through the images, the book explores cultures, ideas of modesty, taboos, style, conformity and rebellion, community and personality. There are many gems one might find through random searches on Indian Amazon.

  • Books
  • Fashion
  • Travel

7 — A Beautiful Collection of Letters

Matthew Carter’s well-known euphemism about typefaces—that they are a beautiful collection of letters rather than a collection of beautiful letters—is best embodied by Czech type design legend František Štorm. Wildly prolific, not just as a type designer but also as a woodblock artist, death metal musician (really), and artist, Štorm’s work is deeply rooted in Czech type history and aesthetics. We used his Anselm Serif for our JIIA project: the individual shapes are so odd and idiosyncratic, yet somehow the typeface manages to create an incredible texture in bodies of text. Seen here is his classic Searpion, another perplexing design.

  • Typography

6 — November in/at Eye

We had the absolute pleasure of visiting the great Simon Easterson and John Walters at the Eye Magazine offices. The place was a goldmine of design books and artifacts, and it was quite a day having Mr. Easterson take us through their archives of cool stuff. Juhi got to nerd out on rare and inexplicable paper samples from luxury printers — a highlight of the year. The best part was the Irma Boom section in the bookshelf.

  • Travel
  • Design

5 — Poster as Art

One of the 20th century’s greatest artists and iconic German enfant terrible Martin Kippenberger was prolific in numerous mediums and styles. One body of work that doesn’t get as much attention is his graphic design: Kippenberger designed hundreds of posters and invitations for his own exhibitions, events, and even parties. The posters showcase Kippenberger’s painterly eye and expert form-making skills, but it’s the disregard for traditional design rules of the time that really shines. If graphic design is a language, Kippenberger was singing in scat.

  • Posters
  • Design
  • Art

4 — Gifting Idea #1029

We were on the lookout for fun gifts for friends who are starting to have kids, and lo and behold, we found this gem in a bookstore. Ridiculously funny and timely, we love how far this author went in making his point. Now we just need to figure out which friend we want to offend the most.

  • Books

3 — Rough Neighbours

The radical cover for the Durutti Column’s debut (ironically titled) The Return of The Durutti Column (1980) was a sheet of rough sandpaper with FACT 14 (Factory’s ingenious cataloguing system) stencilled on. Designed by Factory supremo Tony Wilson himself and inspired by the Situationists and Guy Debord’s Mémoires (1959), the original intention was that the record would destroy its neighbours. The first 2,000 copies were assembled by hand by the band members and labelmates Joy Division.

  • Music
  • Design

2 — Rage Against The Machine

Jean-Luc Godard’s dystopian New Wave classic Alphaville (1965) has always been a favourite. The lack of a budget forbade Godard from creating a futuristic setting with elaborate effects and set pieces — which worked out for the best: the film, set in a normal city, feels claustrophobic and too close to home. Because we all know that a dystopia doesn't look like Blade Runner, it looks like right here, right now. This frame, which opens the film, has been etched in our minds since we first watched it in college: a most powerful anti-war symbol.

  • Film

1 — The Context & The ‘Why’

When we encounter a piece of work that we love, we’re most interested in the context in which it was created: the why, as much as the how. While the how is objective, the why is often elusive and open to interpretation: a film watched as a child could trigger the use of a colour palette in a book being designed, for example. We’ve always loved asking about where the work comes from in conversations with friends and colleagues. We hope this Log will be a way for us to explore that for ourselves — we aim to track our creative consumption (present and past) in no particular order, with no curatorial intent. If you’ve scrolled all this way, we assume it has been helpful or entertaining. Thanks for reading!