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2 min minutes
Pulp 19Inspiration

Perpetual motion

The multi-layered, die-cut Perpetuo! calendar has ‘no beginning and no end’, and places focus on days
Graphic designPrintingPublishing

Tommaso Gentile and Laura Doro of design agency Bottega Artemia [previously Artemia] designed the Perpetuo! calendar with the aim of ‘illustrating a story made of paper, ferrying the observer across a river of typography, history and atmospheres.’ The multi-layered, die-cut calendar has ‘no beginning and no end’, and places focus on days – rather than months or the calendar year – that are navigated using a place-marking magnet. It is intended to be kept and to show the physical toll time takes on the object. Gentile and Doro say that the calendar, printed on Materica Limestone, reveals ‘the flow of time through a visual architecture that shapes ever-changing shadows, depending on how the sun moves during the day and how the artificial light illuminates it.’

See ‘Living by numbers‘ for the full list of case studies.

bottega-artemia.com

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Featured Materials

Materica

Pulp-coloured papers and boards made with 40% CTMP fibres, 25% pure environmentally friendly fibres, 20% recycled material and 15% cotton fibres. Also available in self-adhesive version.

Pulp 19 Articles

Inspiration 06/06/2024

Mind the pay gap

The Lost Time Project aims to ‘spark action and conversation around the gender pay gap’
Graphic designPrintingPublishing
Inspiration 06/06/2024

Guide to the stars

The Barbanera almanac was first published in 1762 and is now in its 258th year
Graphic designIllustrationPrintingPublishing
Inspiration 29/02/2024

The full spectrum

Calendars remind us of the passing of time. Case studies by Sarah Snaith
Graphic designPrinting
Inspiration 29/02/2024

Days of imagination

The 2020 calendar features layered, colourful paintings
Graphic designIllustrationPrinting

In Pulp 19

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