P
P
Phonetic*
This set of five alphabets reimagines the Latin script through systems of phonetics, acrophony, and semiotic encoding. Phonetic structures are abstracted into visual forms that imply sound; acrophonic principles evoke early writing systems where letters referenced speech; and semiotic systems like braille or Morse code are recontextualized as typographic expressions. Removed from their original purposes, these systems become symbolic, with re-translation acting as both method and mode of perception.
This set of five alphabets reimagines the Latin script through systems of phonetics, acrophony, and semiotic encoding. Phonetic structures are abstracted into visual forms that imply sound; acrophonic principles evoke early writing systems where letters referenced speech; and semiotic systems like braille or Morse code are recontextualized as typographic expressions. Removed from their original purposes, these systems become symbolic, with re-translation acting as both method and mode of perception.
This set of five alphabets reimagines the Latin script through systems of phonetics, acrophony, and semiotic encoding. Phonetic structures are abstracted into visual forms that imply sound; acrophonic principles evoke early writing systems where letters referenced speech; and semiotic systems like braille or Morse code are recontextualized as typographic expressions. Removed from their original purposes, these systems become symbolic, with re-translation acting as both method and mode of perception.







