Tjaša Cizej’s experimental work blurs the boundaries between the readable and unreadable
The graphic designer uses letterforms to craft abstract shapes, pushing traditional compositions into new territories.
The Slovenian graphic designer Tjaša Cizej works primarily with printed matter, but she does all of her design work digitally. With a focus on typography, colour and shape her creative process turns to the compositional cornerstones of graphic design with a refreshingly playful approach: “I often create my own typographical arrangements, either by designing characters from scratch or modifying existing typefaces – or a combination of both,” Tjaša tells us. The designer moulds many of these found letterforms into simple geometric shapes that slot neatly into, or deviate from her grids.
“I’m happy when I can achieve an interesting dialogue between all these elements – I wouldn’t say I’m trying to achieve harmony, but more to play with the components and create something unexpected, even if sometimes it might look slightly off,” she says. These compositions come from being quite instinctive, she tells us, and often taking something from her day-to-day life and creating a new context for it – like bits of conversations, or a photo a friend took. For Tjaša this means she‘s always quite surprised by the results, as she tends to let her natural creative process lead the way.
A lot of Tjaša’s work takes a different view on legibility. The designer likes to put her own spin on the suits our words wear – “I like to see how far I can go with it,” she says. “How much can a character be modified and still be recognisable? What spaces are created by pushing and blurring these boundaries?” You’ll never know what form her letters might take next, they might come in a cascade of stretched and squashed shapes or neatly spell something out inside a colourful caterpillar. Whether you are trying to read them or not, they are rather lovely to look at.
Tjaša Cizej, Xiaohan Zhang: Poster for Book Launch at Werkplaats Typografie (Copyright © Tjaša Cizej, Xiaohan Zhang 2025)
Tjaša Cizej, Xiaohan Zhang: Poster for Book Launch at Werkplaats Typografie (Copyright © Tjaša Cizej, Xiaohan Zhang 2025)
Tjaša Cizej: Festival Sound Explicit (Copyright © Tjaša Cizej, 2024)
Tjaša Cizej: ’Kompas’ at Werkplaats Typografie (Copyright © Tjaša Cizej, 2025)
Tjaša Cizej: ’Orange poster’ (Copyright © Tjaša Cizej, 2025)
Tjaša Cizej: Poster for Rira’s Box ’The Shape Is Never Done’, at Werkplaats Typografie (Copyright © Tjaša Cizej, 2025)
Tjaša Cizej: Precious Liquid Magazine (Copyright © Tjaša Cizej, 2023)
Tjaša Cizej: Poster for Festival Tresk (Copyright © Tjaša Cizej, 2022)
Tjaša Cizej: Precious Liquid Magazine (Copyright © Tjaša Cizej, 2023)
Tjaša Cizej: Precious Liquid Magazine (Copyright © Tjaša Cizej, 2023)
Tjaša Cizej, Xiaohan Zhang: Poster for Open Mic ’Open Mic for the Sentimental and Sensitive Construction Workers’, at Werkplaats Typografie (Copyright © Tjaša Cizej, Xiaohan Zhang 2024)
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Tjaša Cizej: Festival Sound Explicit (Copyright © Tjaša Cizej, 2024)
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Ellis Tree (she/her) joined It’s Nice That as a junior writer in April 2024 after graduating from Kingston School of Art with a degree in Graphic Design. Across her research, writing and visual work she has a particular interest in printmaking, self-publishing and expanded approaches to photography. She works across It’s Nice That and Insights.