Designers and creative leads credited on Fam projects in press coverage.
Creative Boom reveals the top 20 graphic designers of 2026, as voted by thousands of creatives in its annual State of Creativity survey. The list highlights influential figures such as Paula Scher, Jessica Walsh, Simon Dixon, and Verónica Fuerte, showcasing a mix of established icons and emerging voices shaping the global design landscape. The article celebrates diversity in practice, from branding and typography to motion and illustration.
Creative Boom profiles illustrator Dan Woodger’s Run London/Draw London project, which merges his passion for running with illustration to raise funds for Oxfam during the London Marathon. Donors can pledge to have themselves drawn into a large map of the marathon route, with the final artwork to be released as a signed print. The initiative blends community participation, digital art, and charity fundraising.
Creative Boom’s article profiles Bristol-based agency Something Familiar and its 2024–25 B Corp Impact Report, ‘Rituals for Good’. The project reimagines corporate transparency through folklore-inspired design, combining AI-generated woodcut illustrations, blackletter typography, and a tactile newspaper edition. The piece highlights how the studio turns scepticism around purpose-led work into a creative opportunity for storytelling and authenticity.
The article profiles London-based 3D artist Intranet Girl, also known as Intra, who is pioneering her own approach to digital design through her concept of '3Dx'. Using Blender, she creates immersive visual identities and collaborations with musicians like Nia Archives and Brighter Days Family. The piece explores her process, inspirations, and her role in legitimising 3D design within the creative industry.
Creative Boom profiles the design of the second issue of the independent food magazine Famous For My Dinner Parties, created by Danish-Icelandic designer Lind Haugaard. The issue embraces playful typography, diverse layouts, and a glossy green cover, celebrating food culture with humor and personality. The magazine continues its collaborative spirit with illustrators and photographers contributing unique visual styles.
The article by The Brand Identity spotlights six branding projects that celebrate and support the LGBTQIA+ community through authentic, inclusive, and vibrant design. Featuring work from studios such as Mother Design, Wedge, Whitman Emorson, POPOLA, McCarthy, and Marina Veziko, it highlights how thoughtful visual identities can empower and represent diverse communities. The piece contrasts these meaningful efforts with superficial 'rainbow washing' and showcases design as a tool for empathy and advocacy.
Zagreb-based studio POPOLA created a refreshed identity for Dugine Obitelji (Rainbow Families), a Croatian LGBTQIA+ organisation. The design blends Balkan cultural motifs with a contemporary queer aesthetic, featuring a rainbow-shaped letterform logo, vibrant palette, and typefaces inspired by 1970s–80s Yugoslavian publishing. The project celebrates inclusivity and local heritage through thoughtful visual and material choices.
SEESAW features the website for Family, a crypto wallet positioned within the fintech and Web3 space. The showcase highlights the fonts used—Honk Sans, Haffer XH, and Inter—and links to the live site. The article serves as a brief visual reference rather than an in-depth case study.