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Designer Of The Week: Special Edition - Münevver Aslan
Each week, the Design Channel highlights one of the most influential designers in web3 and the Farcaster network.
In this weeks special is powered by @octant, we’re enjoying the company of Münevver Aslan @mnvvr, the winner of the Octant's Design for Ethereum contest.
- Your most recent work was the ‘Act logo,’ which was a submission to the Octant bounty. Can you tell us about that project?
Absolutely. That project was a special one for me. I've been following the Argot Collective (@argotorg.eth) with great admiration since they started, so when I saw the Octant bounty for their 'Act' category, it felt like an opportunity I couldn't pass up. My main goal was to distill the idea of 'verified truth' into something incredibly minimal but strong. I kept coming back to the idea of a final, definitive point. That led me to the final design: a clean typographic word mark with a small square dot at the end. It’s meant to be that final point of truth. It was incredibly validating to hear that the team connected with that story and chose my design.
- What is your earliest memory of design?
My earliest memory of noticing design was probably in one of the old role-playing video games I played as a kid. It wasn't just about the story; I was fascinated by the design of the world itself—the layout of the towns, the intricate maps, and even the menus. I remember thinking about how a simple interface could hold such a complex world and guide you through it seamlessly. I didn't have the vocabulary for it then, but looking back, I think that was my first encounter with user experience—the quiet realization that someone had thoughtfully planned every path and every button to make an experience feel intuitive and magical.
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Read the full interview and check out some of @mnvvr's work on @paragraph !
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Designer Of The Week - @chsh.eth!
Week 04 – Each week, the Design Channel highlights one of the most influential designers in web3 and the Farcaster network. This week, we’re enjoying the company of Charles (@chsh.eth).
Charles is a product designer based in Brooklyn. By day, he works at a blockchain company, and by night and on weekends, he dives into side projects. Lately, he’s been vibecoding and exploring every new AI tool he can get his hands on.
1. What's your creative superpower?
I’m pretty fast at visualizing ideas. When someone talks about a brand or product, I usually see how it might look right away — the colors, the vibe, even what the name or logo could be. It just comes naturally, and I often jump in early on projects to help shape that visual direction. That way, everyone gets a clearer picture of what we’re trying to build.
But it’s not just about the visuals. I’m also good at thinking through systems and how ideas connect and extend naturally. When I have one core concept, I start imagining what comes next — how it could evolve, what logical steps or branches might grow out of it. It’s about seeing the bigger picture and the potential paths before anything is built, so the work feels more connected and intentional from the very beginning.
2. Tell us about a project you really enjoyed — what made it special?
One of the most fun projects I’ve worked on is RGB, which I built with my brother @metamonk. It was special because we had a shared vision and got to create something new together — a mix of design, code, and logic. The idea behind RGB is simple but powerful: it’s a framework based on the RGB color model, where red, green, and blue each range from 0 to 255. That gives you 16,777,216 possible combinations. What made it interesting is that we asked: what if instead of just color, those combinations could also represent something like emojis — so rgb(255,153,0) could be 🤠🥳🙂?
We call the outputs Signatures, and they are unique visual representations that contain the RGB values in their onchain metadata. It’s a project with structure and constraint, but also a lot of room for play and interpretation. It’s one of those projects where the deeper you go, the more ideas start flowing.
RGB could be a system for generative PFPs, for identity tracking, or for community infrastructure — the applications are wide open. We’re still figuring out what else we can do with the concept, but it’s the kind of project we’ll be building on for years.
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Read the full interview and check out some of @chsh.eth's work on @paragraph
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