Poging GOUD - Vrij
FROM Bazaars TO BILLBOARDS
Elle India
|February 2025
Visual designers take inspiration from Indian street typography as a bridge between heritage and contemporary design, finds Aabha Sewak

A growing wave of Indian artists and typographers is finding inspiration in an unlikely place: the vanishing hand-painted signs of Indian streets. From Mumbai's film posters to the ornate shop signs of Kolkata's College Street, these creatives aren't just documenting disappearing letterforms—they're revitalising them for contemporary design and art.
Archiving street lettering is not just an act of honouring nostalgia but also about preserving historic artefacts. By documenting and digitising these scripts, designers ensure they remain in cultural circulation. Tracing typographic histories uncovers cultural connections, colonial influences, and the creativity of street lettering artists who have kept India's roads vibrant for centuries. The act of archiving culture is resistance-reclaiming the local design language and decentering global modern design.

Pooja Saxena's archive isn't just about collecting images; it's about tracing influences. An award-winning typeface designer, Saxena started her own independent practice, Matra Type. Based in Delhi, she subtly conjures specific times and places through research-driven design. Born in the late 80s-she belongs to a generation that witnessed the shift from hand-painted signage to mass-produced prints. Her project India Street Lettering Zines Nº 1-3 documents shared typographic culture across 16 cities and 11 scripts. Saxena says, “I use this archive for educational workshops and lectures, type walks, as inspiration for new work, and to broaden my own understanding of Indian typographic cultures and design.”
Dit verhaal komt uit de February 2025-editie van Elle India.
Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.
Bent u al abonnee? Aanmelden
MEER VERHALEN VAN Elle India

Elle India
SMALL BUT MIGHTY
Anamm Inamdar explores Gucci's new Mini GG-a playful reimagining of the classic duffle, where heritage meets modern ease in a perfectly scaled silhouette
1 mins
August 2025

Elle India
BEST FACE FORWARD
Krishika Bhatia explores how makeup bags across generations reflect aspiration, emotion, & quiet rebellion
3 mins
August 2025

Elle India
STITCH Please!
Zoha Castelino chats with the drag artists who design their own fantasy
3 mins
August 2025

Elle India
Postcards from the ALPS
By the time my flight touched down at Geneva Airport, I could feel the excitement rising after nearly twelve hours of travel.
3 mins
August 2025
Elle India
PERFECT CHAOS
Newly appointed Global Creative Director at M·A·C, Nicola Formichetti, sits down with Kannagi Desai for his first-ever interview in India, as he prepares to rewrite the visual language of beauty itself
3 mins
August 2025

Elle India
FIT FOR A STAR
With its blend of classic glamour and cutting-edge modernity, Atlantis The Royal redefines Dubai luxury
1 mins
August 2025

Elle India
Made FOR ME
By having memory, moodboards & personal taste stitched together, a new generation of Indian women is returning to tailoring, finds
5 mins
August 2025

Elle India
THE GUCCI GAZE
Catherine Opie lenses forty two unique individuals for the Florentine fashion house's Fall/Winter 2025 campaign, where fashion frames identity with quiet power
2 mins
August 2025

Elle India
The Princess Diaries
Gauravi Kumari in conversation with Kannagi Desai on legacy, poise, & why she chooses presence over performance
5 mins
August 2025

Elle India
LIVIN' LA DOLCE VITA with Dolce & Gabbana
A quarter-century on, Light Blue returns to Capri. Reimagined, not reinvented
3 mins
August 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size