Utile for Moore College of Art and Design

September 10, 2020

Posted In: Interviews

Moore College of Art & Design Magazine

Moore College of Art & Design has a new visual identity with the typeface family Utile, its primary typographic element at its core. An interview conducted by Samantha Weinraub, leading to a short article and published in the Moore Magazine Fall issue, explores Q&As with the designer behind Moore’s new font.

June 10, 2019

Posted In: Interviews

An Aura of One’s Own

In conversation with Sébastien Morlighem for Fontstand, in an interview titled Kontour: An Aura of One’s Own, Sibylle Hagmann dives deeper into some thoughts on type.

June 14, 2016

Posted In: Interviews

Huh? #31

Perpetual Beta is the cool blog of the Vermont College of Fine Arts MFA Graphic Design program. Among lots of interesting mentions, it features interviews of designers, type designers and artists. Ian Lynam, critique, writer, designer, educator, and Co-Chair of the MFA Graphic Design program at the amazing VCFA conducted an interview with Sibylle Hagmann, who is thrilled about the mentally stimulating exchange.

March 20, 2016

Posted In: Interviews

Educating Educators

inform, the CalArts Graphic Design program blog, features interviews with a spectrum of alumni who are now teaching, Barbara Glauber, Kali Nikitas, Susan La Porte, Sibylle Hagmann, Pirco Wolframm, Jon Sueda, Daryn Wakasa, and Armando Mtz-Celis, posing a few questions about their respective CalArts experiences. Blog post by Michael Worthington.

March 1, 2015

Posted In: Interviews

Women in Type Design

A FontShop feature of Women in Design to mark the International Women’s Day on March 8. The series of interviews recognizes some of the talented women type designers working today.

August 1, 2008

Posted In: Interviews, Publications

Font. The Sourcebook

Teal Triggs asks Sibylle Hagmann in “Great Women Typographers: Where are They?” The interview published in the book titled Font. The Sourcebook is based on revisiting some of the issues which emerged from Linda Nochlin’s original feminist essay which asked “where are all the women artists?”.