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<channel>
	<title>Jamila Alemi</title>
	<link>https://jamilaalemi.cargo.site</link>
	<description>Jamila Alemi</description>
	<pubDate>Sun, 22 Feb 2026 16:28:44 +0000</pubDate>
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	<language>en</language>
	
		
	<item>
		<title>Me Talk Pretty One Day</title>
				
		<link>https://jamilaalemi.cargo.site/Me-Talk-Pretty-One-Day</link>

		<pubDate>Sun, 22 Feb 2026 16:28:30 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>Jamila Alemi</dc:creator>

		<guid isPermaLink="true">https://jamilaalemi.cargo.site/Me-Talk-Pretty-One-Day</guid>

		<description>
	




















Me Talk Pretty One Day
	
	2025


	&#60;img width="1920" height="1358" width_o="1920" height_o="1358" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/6677268ded3d430839962bd4896f79fa5cb3d4e07e4ba9712da9091a9c200e8f/ezgif.com-speed-2.gif" data-mid="245195168" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/6677268ded3d430839962bd4896f79fa5cb3d4e07e4ba9712da9091a9c200e8f/ezgif.com-speed-2.gif" /&#62;
	In
collaboration with Fay Buurman &#38;amp; Jara Hermanns












































Me Talk Pretty One Day is a
redesign of the book by David Sedaris, developed around the themes of travel,
language, and dislocation. In the original, Sedaris reflects on his move from
the United States to France, navigating a new culture and the awkwardness of
learning a new language, experiences that shape much of the book’s tone and
structure.



The design draws from the
visual language of public transit and travel documents. Long and narrow in
format, the proportions reference folded metro maps, while the book opens and
closes with alternating layers of grey and yellow paper. Perforated lines of
holes appear across these early and final pages, resembling the tear-off
markings of transport tickets.



Throughout the book,
references to transit systems are woven into the structure. The title pages
display a vertical line with 27 black dots, each representing a chapter. The
current chapter is indicated by a punched-out hole in place of its dot, marking
it like a stop on a route. This visual system continues in the running header,
where the same transit line reappears horizontally across each spread. A larger
black dot marks the reader’s current chapter, and the line gently shifts in
height, beginning high on the left page and dropping slightly lower 
on the
right, to subtly indicate the transition from part one to part two.



Typography was chosen to
echo the tone of the writing.
 Katari is used for quoted speech, capturing the
bold, outspoken character of Sedaris’s voice, while EB Garamond carries the rest
of the text with a more grounded, narrative rhythm. 
Tight margins and long text
frames reflect the density and pacing of Sedaris’s storytelling.



Rather than simply framing
the text, the redesign mirrors its rhythm, quietly shaped by movement,
structure, and shifts in language. Me Talk Pretty One Day becomes not just a book to read, but one to
navigate, punched, paced, and mapped like a journey of its own.
︎More info &#38;amp; stills
</description>
		
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	<item>
		<title>Modern Design in Jewellery and Fans</title>
				
		<link>https://jamilaalemi.cargo.site/Modern-Design-in-Jewellery-and-Fans</link>

		<pubDate>Sun, 22 Feb 2026 16:28:34 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>Jamila Alemi</dc:creator>

		<guid isPermaLink="true">https://jamilaalemi.cargo.site/Modern-Design-in-Jewellery-and-Fans</guid>

		<description>
	Modern Design in Jewellery and Fans
	
	2024


	&#60;img width="1920" height="1358" width_o="1920" height_o="1358" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/ed12b792e8f383b8995daa512d5a2419f989a8f2659cd1ec7445b04464dda192/jewellery.gif" data-mid="245195236" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/ed12b792e8f383b8995daa512d5a2419f989a8f2659cd1ec7445b04464dda192/jewellery.gif" /&#62;
	Modern Design in Jewellery and Fans is a redesigned catalogue based on the book of the same name, originally edited by Charles Holme. The project focuses on a selected portion of the publication and reinterprets it into a visually focused, contemporary format.

Created as part of a design assignment with specific constraints, the project required selecting a title from the Project Gutenberg archive, limited to the art category, and redesigning it into a 48-page catalogue. Within these restrictions, this version highlights the jewellery and fans featured in the original, presenting them in a more curated and spacious layout.

The layout was kept minimal to allow the jewellery and fans to take center stage, highlighting their decorative qualities and refined detail. With the use of shimmering silver paper and fine silver thread for binding, these choices aim to echo the texture and delicacy of the works featured.

By isolating and recontextualizing elements from the original book, Modern Design in Jewellery and Fans presents historical imagery through a contemporary editorial lens, shifting the emphasis toward visual storytelling through layout, pacing, and material choices.︎More info &#38;amp; stills

</description>
		
	</item>
		
		
	<item>
		<title>The Language of Hands</title>
				
		<link>https://jamilaalemi.cargo.site/The-Language-of-Hands</link>

		<pubDate>Sun, 22 Feb 2026 16:28:37 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>Jamila Alemi</dc:creator>

		<guid isPermaLink="true">https://jamilaalemi.cargo.site/The-Language-of-Hands</guid>

		<description>
	The Language of Hands
	
	2023


	&#60;img width="1920" height="1358" width_o="1920" height_o="1358" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/231102699b0c5ab7de341ddb109f66bbe7d0806fcad0244e248dcc6640fa5782/ezgif.com-speed-1.gif" data-mid="245195293" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/231102699b0c5ab7de341ddb109f66bbe7d0806fcad0244e248dcc6640fa5782/ezgif.com-speed-1.gif" /&#62;
	The Language of Hands is a photographic exploration of hands as captured in the artworks archived by the Rijksmuseum. 
By isolating these artworks from their larger context, this project delves into the delicate expressions of hands as they appear in historic artworks, focusing on how they hold, rest, and interact in ways that reveal intimacy and emotion. In this project, hands become the storytellers, speaking across centuries through softness of touch, posture, and placement.

Each artwork captures a gesture that might otherwise go unnoticed, a hand lightly touching a sleeve, fingers wrapped around an object, or holding each other's hands. 
The Language of Hands invites the viewer to engage with the timeless, quiet language of hands as a window into the human experience, bridging generations through a shared, 
silent touch.︎ More info &#38;amp; stills

 

</description>
		
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	<item>
		<title>Mid-Air Bookshop Poster</title>
				
		<link>https://jamilaalemi.cargo.site/Mid-Air-Bookshop-Poster</link>

		<pubDate>Sun, 22 Feb 2026 16:28:40 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>Jamila Alemi</dc:creator>

		<guid isPermaLink="true">https://jamilaalemi.cargo.site/Mid-Air-Bookshop-Poster</guid>

		<description>
	Mid-Air Bookshop Poster
	
	2025 (Internship)


	&#60;img width="29225" height="20667" width_o="29225" height_o="20667" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/3eb93e9b4303986b9e71ed99c9cd25d099de6429cf975184722d05bddf84a1b4/B-S-poster.png" data-mid="245195351" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/3eb93e9b4303986b9e71ed99c9cd25d099de6429cf975184722d05bddf84a1b4/B-S-poster.png" /&#62;
	Made for Foam Fotografiemuseum Amsterdam
Poster for the exhibition Mid-Air by Blommers &#38;amp; Schumm, designed for Foam’s bookshop during an internship at Foam. The design follows&#38;nbsp;Foam’s new visual identity&#38;nbsp;and was the first poster to be made following these new guidelines.&#38;nbsp;

The poster is available in Foam’s bookshop&#38;nbsp;and online at shop.foam.org

Image credit:
Jana for Agenda Magazine, styling by Danielle van Camp, 2024 © Blommers &#38;amp; Schumm.

 

</description>
		
	</item>
		
		
	<item>
		<title>Printen moeten we vieren</title>
				
		<link>https://jamilaalemi.cargo.site/Printen-moeten-we-vieren</link>

		<pubDate>Sun, 22 Feb 2026 16:28:42 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>Jamila Alemi</dc:creator>

		<guid isPermaLink="true">https://jamilaalemi.cargo.site/Printen-moeten-we-vieren</guid>

		<description>
	Printen moeten we vieren
	
	2025


	&#60;img width="3507" height="2480" width_o="3507" height_o="2480" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/612ba9c8e66fea4d92a588bc23953fc6ee79f99310c516f7f79fef40371edf8a/side-1.png" data-mid="245195374" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/612ba9c8e66fea4d92a588bc23953fc6ee79f99310c516f7f79fef40371edf8a/side-1.png" /&#62;
	In collaboration with Fay Buurman

Created as part of a portfolio class assignment judged by NPN Printers, Printen moeten we vieren is a double-sided A2 poster that highlights the value of local print production. The design is built around a modular structure, folding systems, and the formal logic of paper itself.

The word print appears five times across the poster, constructed from A12-sized blocks, the second smallest defined format within the ISO 216 paper system. Some are readable, others are scrambled. The spacing between blocks follows the same ratio, set at one-quarter of the A12 size. The poster folds into five equal parts, generating a grid of four vertical and four horizontal lines. This structure became the foundation for the poster’s composition.

The number four is used as a guiding system: four grid lines, four print colours (CMYK), four letters in the final row. The sentence Printen moeten we vieren reflects both a celebration of print and the underlying structure of the design. Hidden in the center vertical row, the letters NPN PR offer 
a quiet reference to the print house for whom the poster was created.

The building blocks that form each letter are divided across both sides of the poster. When held to the light, the layers align and the full forms emerge. Printed on IBO One paper, its transparency activates this interaction, merging front and back into a single system of reading.

Printen moeten we vieren turns the act of printing into both subject and method, folded, layered, and quietly coded with care.

 

</description>
		
	</item>
		
		
	<item>
		<title>Illusie</title>
				
		<link>https://jamilaalemi.cargo.site/Illusie-1</link>

		<pubDate>Sun, 22 Feb 2026 16:28:43 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>Jamila Alemi</dc:creator>

		<guid isPermaLink="true">https://jamilaalemi.cargo.site/Illusie-1</guid>

		<description>
  Illusie
  
   
    2025
  



  
    
    
  

  

Illusie is a short sci-fi essay film exploring the simulation hypothesis through a personal lens, beginning with a childhood memory of playing The Sims, a moment that sparked both fascination and unease. This memory raises the question: if we can control virtual lives, who or what might be controlling ours?



Using a combination of footage filmed within The Sims 4 and shots from the real world, the video gradually shifts from virtual to physical spaces. Scenes of houses, cars, and familiar places mirror one another, blurring the line between what is simulated and what is real. This shift begins at the moment the childhood memory turns uneasy, when the game suddenly feels too real.



Extending beyond the screen, the work is presented 
on a desk-like setup designed to replicate the environment where the game is usually played. Surrounding the video are personal trinkets and photographs from the artist’s room, placed alongside their Sims-recreated counterparts. This deliberate physical context draws viewers into the blurred boundary between virtual and real, reinforcing the central question of the work: where does the simulation end, and the real world begin?



Through its calm pace and reflective tone, Illusie invites quiet speculation on the nature of reality. If our lives were part of a simulation, would we even be able to tell? And if so, how might that knowledge change the way we live?




</description>
		
	</item>
		
		
	<item>
		<title>In the Eye of the Beholder</title>
				
		<link>https://jamilaalemi.cargo.site/In-the-Eye-of-the-Beholder</link>

		<pubDate>Sun, 22 Feb 2026 16:28:44 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>Jamila Alemi</dc:creator>

		<guid isPermaLink="true">https://jamilaalemi.cargo.site/In-the-Eye-of-the-Beholder</guid>

		<description>
	In the Eye of the Beholder
	
	2024



	

	Media Arts Festival Arnhem (MAFA) 
Focus Filmtheater Arnhem &#38;amp; Museum Arnhem
In collaboration with Sara Pothof &#38;amp; Anne-Sophie Berting

In the Eye of the Beholder questions the minimalist lifestyle by focusing on the often-overlooked value of “imperfect” or discarded objects. Inspired by an article listing things to “get rid of” in pursuit of minimalism, this video explores a different perspective: what if these objects had their own stories to tell?

Using found footage of a minimalist explaining his lifestyle, combined with our own footage shot in secondhand shops, &#38;nbsp;we highlight the quiet presence of these forgotten items. 
Through close-up shots of worn, cracked, or scuffed objects, &#38;nbsp;we present these items from a new point of view, highlighting their unique character and quiet beauty.

The aim of In the Eye of the Beholder is to let viewers rethink their relationship with possessions. In a culture that often prioritizes the new and unblemished, we ask: does everything we own need to be flawless? Or can we find beauty and meaning in objects that show signs of use and history? 
With so many unique items already available in secondhand stores, this project invites us to embrace the imperfect and appreciate the stories held within the things we already have.
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