“Typography is an art. Good typography is art.” — Paul Rand
Typography stops being decoration the moment it becomes the message. The best print ads in this collection prove it: a lemon peel curling into Coca-Cola’s distinctive lettering, words shaped into objects, and letterforms stretched, blurred or rearranged to communicate an idea before the copy is even read. In each case, the type is not supporting the visual. It is the visual.
Before we consciously read a word, we register its shape. These ads exploit that split second brilliantly. Letters are bent, stretched, blurred, tied, poured and constructed until their form communicates the idea as clearly as their meaning.
The strongest executions resist the urge to overdesign. A shoelace loops into Volkswagen’s iconic monogram. A familiar word changes meaning through a simple shift in form. One visual twist carries the entire brief, while the copy knows better than to explain the joke.
That balance of wit, craft and restraint is what separates decorative typography from genuinely effective advertising. Nothing unnecessary, nothing wasted—just type doing the work of both image and idea.
1. Career Junction: Skills

2. Australia Post: Hug

3. Bayer Iberogast: Less Excuses

4. Corona Extra: Boss

5. Regaine: Hair Restorer

6. Durex: Type Sex

7. Pivot Boutique: Karma

8. Mercedes-Benz: Read the street

9. Smokenders: Cemetery

10. Toyota: Efficiency

11. Amnesty International: Leg

12. Autism Forum Switzerland: Facial expressions

13. Corrado Mattresses: Pil

14. Coca-Cola Light: Lemon

15. Chupa Chups: Lollypops

16. EASY Home Improvement Stores: Get Organized

17. Smarties: Feed Your Imagination

18. Arraze Rat Killer: Game Over

19. Coca-Cola: Torch Bearer

20. Aasra Helpline: Depression

21. ABSA Bank: Pesach

22. Volkswagen: Stingrays

23. A+ Architects: Inspired

24. UN World Population Day

25. Malteser Ambulance: Skull Fracture

26. Sanyo: Floating Log, Sleeping Croc

27. Luxor: Highlight What’s Important (Chaplin)

28. Levi’s Low Rise Jeans: Victoria’s Secret

29. Olay: Correct your age

Our favourites: Coke Lemon, Volkswagen, and Olay. What about you? Share this post with a designer friend and voice your views in the comments below.





