Studio Updates
Feature: What Will the Future of the Book Look Like?
APR 18
/
5 min.



The book is an object deeply rooted in history, but as technology reshapes how we consume information, its form, function, and future are being reimagined.
In 2018, as part of a group of MA students at the Royal College of Art, we interrogated these shifts—questioning how books could adapt to new realities while retaining their cultural and tactile significance.
Design Week captured this exploration in their article, "What will the book of the future look like?", discussing how our group experimented with design, materiality, and interaction to push the boundaries of traditional publishing.
Read the full article here.
The book is an object deeply rooted in history, but as technology reshapes how we consume information, its form, function, and future are being reimagined.
In 2018, as part of a group of MA students at the Royal College of Art, we interrogated these shifts—questioning how books could adapt to new realities while retaining their cultural and tactile significance.
Design Week captured this exploration in their article, "What will the book of the future look like?", discussing how our group experimented with design, materiality, and interaction to push the boundaries of traditional publishing.
Read the full article here.
The book is an object deeply rooted in history, but as technology reshapes how we consume information, its form, function, and future are being reimagined.
In 2018, as part of a group of MA students at the Royal College of Art, we interrogated these shifts—questioning how books could adapt to new realities while retaining their cultural and tactile significance.
Design Week captured this exploration in their article, "What will the book of the future look like?", discussing how our group experimented with design, materiality, and interaction to push the boundaries of traditional publishing.
Read the full article here.


KK STUDIO
Share Article
Share Article
Share Article