Gummo inject Dutch stamps with augmented reality

Stamps are in a bit of a sticky situation. Rising prices and the ever-present threat of email loom over 170 years of history. The era of the postage stamp as a small-scale venue for artistic and design expression is fading fast. Happily a few studios continue to work their magic on this most compact of canvases. The aptly-named Gummo, an Amsterdam-based design consultancy, were commissioned by the Dutch Post Office to create a set of stamps celebrating the wonders of forthcoming contemporary architecture in the Netherlands.
A dream brief from the outset, but as Gummo's Sterre Jongerius explains, the agency wanted to do more. 'The natural two-dimensional limitations of a postage stamp could never do justice to the full majesty of these projects.' Hence they decided on creating a separate set of five stamps with a graphic representation of the building, injected with some augmented reality. By combining illustrations with QR codes, lucky recipients of these graphic stamps can hold their letters up to a webcam and see a 3D model of the building spring to life. Hold all five up at the same time and a sixth as yet unbuilt structure for the Dutch Architectural Institute, jumps out at you.
Watch the augmented reality stamps come to life
With tech backup from the DPI Animation House in the Hague, the new stamps inject fresh life into a long-cherished but endangered medium.
The five stamps commemorate contemporary architecture in the Netherlands. But hold the stamps up to a webcam and see a 3D model of the building spring to life
For each building there is also a graphic representation of the building on a black background, that if you hold up to a webcam a 3D model of the building springs to life
The Kenniscluster in Arnhem, by Neutelings Riedijk Architecten
The Kenniscluster in Arnhem, by Neutelings Riedijk Architecten
Skytower in Amsterday, by SeARCH
Skytower in Amsterday, by SeARCH
De Boekenberg Sijkenisse by MVRDV
De Boekenberg Sijkenisse by MVRDV
Windpost Maasvlakte by ZUS (Zones Urbaines Sensibles)
Windpost Maasvlakte by ZUS (Zones Urbaines Sensibles)
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Jonathan Bell has written for Wallpaper* magazine since 1999, covering everything from architecture and transport design to books, tech and graphic design. He is now the magazine’s Transport and Technology Editor. Jonathan has written and edited 15 books, including Concept Car Design, 21st Century House, and The New Modern House. He is also the host of Wallpaper’s first podcast.
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