Image 1 of 6
Image 2 of 6
Image 3 of 6
Image 4 of 6
Image 5 of 6
Image 6 of 6
Julia Jenny – Riso Card Set
Set of 6 Cards
Cards are individually packaged to keep them prestine until use
Back side blank
Format: A6 (10.5 × 14.8cm)
With matching six C6 envelopes (11.4 × 16.2cm)
Paper: Bright white
Printing: Risography
Printed in Switzerland
About Julia Jenny:
Julia Jenny is a Basel-based designer and illustrator. She develops visual communication and design for corporate designs, brochures, information graphics, illustrations, animations, web design and more. Her work is know for its individual, light and meticulous design, referencing classic Swiss graphic design and experimenting with printing methods such as screen printing and especially risography. The iconic stencil printing machines were released in the 1980s by Japanese Riso Kagaku Company, using a cylinder printing method similar to screen printing. Initially used primarily for inexpensive and fast reproduction in schools and government offices, risography has increasingly become a popular printing technique for specialised publishers, designers, artists and illustrators. Risography is characterised by the fact that the ink is applied to the paper without the use of chemicals or heat.
Set of 6 Cards
Cards are individually packaged to keep them prestine until use
Back side blank
Format: A6 (10.5 × 14.8cm)
With matching six C6 envelopes (11.4 × 16.2cm)
Paper: Bright white
Printing: Risography
Printed in Switzerland
About Julia Jenny:
Julia Jenny is a Basel-based designer and illustrator. She develops visual communication and design for corporate designs, brochures, information graphics, illustrations, animations, web design and more. Her work is know for its individual, light and meticulous design, referencing classic Swiss graphic design and experimenting with printing methods such as screen printing and especially risography. The iconic stencil printing machines were released in the 1980s by Japanese Riso Kagaku Company, using a cylinder printing method similar to screen printing. Initially used primarily for inexpensive and fast reproduction in schools and government offices, risography has increasingly become a popular printing technique for specialised publishers, designers, artists and illustrators. Risography is characterised by the fact that the ink is applied to the paper without the use of chemicals or heat.