Nico Schweizer
(*1969) graduated from the School of Visual Arts in New York in 1993 and set up a studio in Hoboken, NJ. Along with a handful of other graphic typefaces, he released LL Typ 1451 (1998), LL Hoboken High (1998), and LL Le Corbusier (1999). Following 2000, he taught at the Cooper Union School of Art, and in 2003, he became art director at the now defunct International Design Magazine (I.D.), a leading design publication in the US.
In 2004, Nico moved to Tuscany and later to Switzerland with his young family. He started a line of wooden children’s toys in 2005, and set up a small agency for graphic identity and website design in Zurich. Returning to NYC in 2013, he joined The New Yorker magazine as a design director. He now lives and works in the Hudson Valley.
LL Hoboken High (Product discontinued)
LL Le Corbusier (Product discontinued)
LL Typ 1451 (Initial design proposal)
LL Rephlex (Initial design proposal)
Nico Schweizer
(*1969) graduated from the School of Visual Arts in New York in 1993 and set up a studio in Hoboken, NJ. Along with a handful of other graphic typefaces, he released LL Typ 1451 (1998), LL Hoboken High (1998), and LL Le Corbusier (1999). Following 2000, he taught at the Cooper Union School of Art, and in 2003, he became art director at the now defunct International Design Magazine (I.D.), a leading design publication in the US.
In 2004, Nico moved to Tuscany and later to Switzerland with his young family. He started a line of wooden children’s toys in 2005, and set up a small agency for graphic identity and website design in Zurich. Returning to NYC in 2013, he joined The New Yorker magazine as a design director. He now lives and works in the Hudson Valley.
LL Hoboken High (Product discontinued)
LL Le Corbusier (Product discontinued)
LL Typ 1451 (Initial design proposal)
LL Rephlex (Initial design proposal)