Beautiful Legacy

The Futura Typeface by Paul Renner

12 min · 17 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio The Futura Typeface by Paul Renner

Descripción

In this episode of Beautiful Legacy, we look at Futura, the geometric typeface designed by Paul Renner in 1927.   Built from circles, lines, and disciplined reduction, Futura rejected ornament and historical nostalgia in favour of clarity, order, and modernity. It was not created to decorate the future - it was created to give the future a visual voice.   From European modernism to the Apollo 11 Moon landing plaque, Futura became one of the most powerful typographic symbols of progress. But its legacy did not remain in design history. It entered commerce, culture, and everyday life, shaping the visual language of brands like Volkswagen, Nike, and Supreme.   Futura’s story reveals the paradox of modern design: a typeface created to feel rational and universal became one of the most recognisable aesthetic signatures of the 20th century.

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52 episodios

episode The Futura Typeface by Paul Renner artwork

The Futura Typeface by Paul Renner

In this episode of Beautiful Legacy, we look at Futura, the geometric typeface designed by Paul Renner in 1927.   Built from circles, lines, and disciplined reduction, Futura rejected ornament and historical nostalgia in favour of clarity, order, and modernity. It was not created to decorate the future - it was created to give the future a visual voice.   From European modernism to the Apollo 11 Moon landing plaque, Futura became one of the most powerful typographic symbols of progress. But its legacy did not remain in design history. It entered commerce, culture, and everyday life, shaping the visual language of brands like Volkswagen, Nike, and Supreme.   Futura’s story reveals the paradox of modern design: a typeface created to feel rational and universal became one of the most recognisable aesthetic signatures of the 20th century.

17 de jun de 202612 min
episode The Frankfurt Kitchen by Margarete Schütte-Lihotzky artwork

The Frankfurt Kitchen by Margarete Schütte-Lihotzky

In this episode of Beautiful Legacy, we look at the Frankfurt Kitchen, designed in 1926 by Austrian architect Margarete Schütte-Lihotzky.   Created for a social housing project in Frankfurt, this small, narrow kitchen was not designed as decoration or domestic comfort in the traditional sense. It was designed as a system.   Schütte-Lihotzky studied movement, reach, storage, hygiene, workflow and time, applying the logic of industrial efficiency to the everyday act of cooking. The result was one of the first modern fitted kitchens - compact, precise and deeply functional.   But its legacy is not simple.   The Frankfurt Kitchen made domestic labour visible, measurable and worthy of design attention. At the same time, it also reveals the contradictions of efficiency: who is the system designed for, who performs the labour, and what kind of life does the system reinforce?   From fitted cabinets to modular kitchens, from ergonomic planning to user-centred design, the Frankfurt Kitchen shaped far more than domestic architecture. It introduced a way of thinking that still defines how we design homes, services, retail spaces and everyday flows.

11 de jun de 202610 min
episode The "I ❤️ NY" Mark By Milton Glaser artwork

The "I ❤️ NY" Mark By Milton Glaser

In this episode of Beautiful Legacy, we look at I ❤️ NY, the logo that turned civic identity into emotional shorthand.   Created by Milton Glaser in 1977, the mark appeared at a moment when New York was facing financial crisis, crime, and a damaged public image. What could have been a simple tourism campaign became something much deeper: a declaration of affection for a complicated city.   This episode explores how Glaser compressed belonging, pride, resilience, and emotion into four simple signs: I, a heart, and NY. It looks at why the logo worked so powerfully - not by explaining New York, but by giving people a way to express their relationship with it.   From T-shirts and souvenirs to global imitations and civic solidarity, I ❤️ NY became more than a campaign. It became public language.   A story about graphic design, city branding, and how a place can become emotionally recognisable through one unforgettable mark.

2 de jun de 202610 min
episode The Bra by Mary Phelps Jacob artwork

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In this episode of Beautiful Legacy, we look at the bra - one of the most intimate and culturally complex design objects of modern life.   Originally created by Mary Phelps Jacob as a practical rejection of the corset, the bra introduced softness, flexibility, and movement at a time when women’s bodies were still shaped by rigid social and physical structures. Her improvised invention separated support from control, offering a new relationship between clothing and the body.   But its legacy is not simple.   As the bra became industrialised, standardised, advertised, and redesigned, it also became part of a new system of expectations. What began as liberation gradually became connected to beauty, modesty, desirability, and the public gaze.   This is a story about design’s power to both free and define us.

27 de may de 202610 min
episode The Fender Precision Bass by Leo Fender artwork

The Fender Precision Bass by Leo Fender

In this episode of Beautiful Legacy we get into the rhythm. Before the Fender Precision Bass, rhythm was heavy, fragile, and difficult to move. Bass players relied on the upright bass - a beautiful but demanding instrument that struggled with volume, portability, and precision in a changing musical world.   In 1951, Leo Fender redesigned the bass for the electric age.   The Precision Bass was smaller, amplified, fretted, and built for working musicians who needed rhythm to travel. It did not simply make the bass louder. It changed the posture of the player, the structure of the band, and the physical force of modern music.   From rock and soul to funk, punk, disco, and pop, the P Bass helped turn the bass line into a defining foundation of popular sound.   This episode explores how one instrument transformed rhythm from something carried in the background into something mobile, amplified, and central.   A story about music, movement, and the moment rhythm became portable.

20 de may de 202612 min