Designing the Architecture of Understanding
Science publishing often falls into one of two extremes: it is either dense and overly academic, or it is chaotic and oversimplified. When NEXUS approached us, they had a mandate that rejected both: “Create a modern science magazine that makes complex systems visually intuitive without sacrificing credibility.”
Built on the idea that everything is connected—from biology to astronomy—the design needed to reflect interconnected intelligence. Here is how we built a visual language for the “Curious Decoder.”
The Clarity Gap
The founders of NEXUS possessed incredible content. They covered the intricacies of the human brain, tectonic shifts, and stellar evolution. But without a unifying visual framework, these topics felt isolated.
Modern readers have short attention spans but high design expectations. If a layout doesn't guide comprehension immediately, the reader disengages. We realized that NEXUS didn’t just need to look good; it needed to function as a teaching tool. The layout had to be the teacher.
Contrast & Function
Visual Comparison
The "Curious Decoder"
We tailored the design for a specific psychographic we called The Curious Decoder. This reader values clarity over cleverness. They feel a sense of reward when a complex concept clicks into place.
To serve them, we established a core design principle: Show the structure, then explain the function.
We moved away from “wall of text” layouts. Instead, we prioritized a modular spread system where the diagram is the hero, not an afterthought.
Breathing Room
Isometric Clarity
Color as Navigation
To keep the magazine cohesive yet distinct, we developed "Color Universes" for different scientific disciplines. Color isn't just decoration here; it’s cognitive navigation.
- Biology (The Lungs): Uses clean whitespace and soft anatomical tones to signal human health.
- Earth Science (Tectonic Plates): Uses grounded earth tones, greens, and beiges.
- Astronomy (Star Cycles): Utilizes deep blacks and high-contrast neon gradients.
Cosmic Contrast
Depth & Mechanics
Diagrams that Narrate
The biggest challenge was showing movement in a static medium. Whether it is the swirling formation of a hurricane or the slow grind of tectonic plates, the typography and layout had to guide the eye through time.
We utilized sequential framing and clear directional arrows to break down processes. The eye moves naturally from left to right, guided by “explanatory clusters” rather than long columns of text.
Macro Visualization
Sequential Storytelling
The Macro and The Micro
The NEXUS system had to scale. It needed to handle the massive (global wind patterns) and the violent (volcanic eruptions) with the same level of typographic authority.
We chose a bold, geometric typeface for headlines to anchor the page, signaling stability. This allows the illustrations to be fluid and organic without the page feeling messy.
Data Hierarchy
The Invisible Made Visible
The Outcome
NEXUS launched as a system-driven publication rather than an article-driven one. Readers now begin with the diagrams. Educators are using the spreads as visual teaching tools, and students report higher retention rates.
NEXUS finally feels like how science actually works—interconnected, structured, and alive.

