Neville Brody is most known for his work in the early eighties that broke the boundaries of Graphic Design. He worked with a magazine called "Face Magazine" where he implemented visual elements with architectural ones. He worked for this magazine from 1981-1986. His magazine styles soon became popular trends and media started to use these images in the 80's for everything. Another large project that Neville worked on in the 80's was FUSE, which is a project where experimental typefaces and posters are published. Neville started a big trend by designing his own typefaces. His work has been commissioned by such major organisations as Berlin’s Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Greenpeace, Japanese companies Men’s Bigi and Parco, the Dutch Postal Service, the German cable channel Premiere and Austria’s ORF TV channel. Today, Neville Brody’s work focuses largely on electronic communications design. At the same time, he continues to create his unique and striking digital typefaces. His contributions to the world of graphic design and digital typography are absolutely invaluable. Often referred to as a “star typographer”, Brody has designed a number of very well-known typfaces.
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