Victoria Rosselli makes great design by embracing “happy little accidents”

Working across brand and editorial while maintaining a strong personal practice, this New York-based designer revels in range.

Date
3 July 2024

One thing that’s helped Victoria Rosselli become the designer and creative she is today, is by adopting a “loose sensibility”. She doesn’t perceive herself as a “good” academic, or “traditional” illustrator, and so she dedicates herself to taking more unusual routes. “My design usually begins tight and then I go in and see where I can fuck things up a bit,” she says. Risograph has been a medium which has helped such an approach, with Victoria adding offsets in the original registration to manipulate the way it prints. “I realised that I was often producing great results out of those happy little accidents.”

One such “accident” is Victoria’s recent personal project, a zine which celebrates New York’s infamous Park Slope Food Coop. It captures the uniqueness of the space and how it operates, with gamified floor plans, up-close examinations of great packaging, and shots of the co-op in action, all given a rough charm with the slightly off-kilter printing. Publications also form a large part of the designer’s commissioned work. She’s a designer at The Wall Street Journal Magazine, and her work has been displayed in New York Magazine, Refinery29 and more. “I’m just happy to be able to work alongside great journalism or storytelling, and to see how I can use art and design to elevate the idea without fighting against it,” she says.

Victoria cites two main influences that might seem worlds apart: dance and Matt Willey. She trained in ballet, contemporary and jazz for 16 years, and sees dance as akin to design. “There’s the rigour and technique, the grid and structure, and that’s just half the battle,” she says. “The most difficult part of both is making it all look easy, achieving the perfect balance of pace and drama.” And it was when Victoria first encountered Matt Willey’s work that she knew she wanted to be a designer – she was attracted to the diversity of projects he works on, something now apparent in her own vast and varied portfolio.

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Victoria Rosselli: Welcome to the Park Slope Food Coop (Copyright © Victoria Rosselli, 2024)

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Victoria Rosselli: Welcome to the Park Slope Food Coop (Copyright © Victoria Rosselli, 2024)

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Victoria Rosselli: Welcome to the Park Slope Food Coop (Copyright © Victoria Rosselli, 2024)

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The Wall Street Journal: A New Generational Divide Opens Over Cheap Stuff on Temu, illustration by Victoria Rosselli (Copyright © The Wall Street Journal, 2024)

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The Wall Street Journal: A Year After Titan's Implosion, the Ultrawealthy Still Can't Resist the Deep Sea, photography by Brian Finke (Copyright © The Wall Street Journal, 2024)

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New York Magazine: Protecting a Predator, illustration by Mark Harris (Copyright © New York Magazine, 2023)

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Victoria Rosselli: The Copenhagen Metro (Copyright © Victoria Rosselli, 2023)

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Victoria Rosselli: The Copenhagen Metro (Copyright © Victoria Rosselli, 2023)

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Casper: Evergreen campaign, photography by Justin Chung (Copyright © Casper, 2022)

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Departures: Wildair Donuts, directed by Blaise Cepis (Copyright © Departures, 2021)

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Victoria Rosselli: Welcome to the Park Slope Food Coop (Copyright © Victoria Rosselli, 2024)

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About the Author

Olivia Hingley

Olivia (she/her) joined the It’s Nice That team as an editorial assistant in November 2021 and soon became staff writer. A graduate of the University of Edinburgh with a degree in English Literature and History, she’s particularly interested in photography, publications and type design.

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