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August 8, 2025

Andreghino Design - Andrea Curto

Discover the interview of Andrea Curto from Andreghino Design:

How did you become designer?

It all started when I was 14. I somehow managed to download Photoshop 2013, and from that moment I was hooked. I didn’t even know what graphic design was, but I was obsessed with making things look right. I spent hours adjusting layouts, aligning elements, experimenting with fonts and colors. Without realizing it, I was learning the foundations: grids, hierarchy, negative space.

What started as pure curiosity quickly turned into a passion. I began designing fake album covers, logos for imaginary brands, even packaging for products that didn’t exist.

Years later, I realized this wasn’t just a passion. It was a weapon. I decided to go all in: studying design, working with real clients, and turning that 14-year-old obsession into a skillset I could use while working.

How would you define your vision of design, your style? 

Design is not decoration but strategy made visible.
My vision of design is simple: clarity wins. Good design should cut through the noise, guide the eye, and make people feel something before they even know why.

I approach every project as a system, not just a canvas. I focus on structure, balance, and tension. Those are the invisible forces that make something feel right. I believe in design that speaks with authority, not volume.

My style? Bold minimalism with intent. Clean layouts, strong typography, and subtle details that reward attention. I design to convert, to elevate, and to last.

For the future, what are your professional projects?

I want to keep evolving as a designer – but not just in terms of tools or trends. My focus is on mastering visual identity and packaging at a level where design becomes a strategic asset, not just an aesthetic one.

I’m aiming to work on projects where design drives real impact: shaping how people perceive value, trust, and meaning through form and function. I’m especially drawn to working with bold, ambitious brands: the kind that want to stand out, not fit in.

Long term, I want to be known not just as a designer, but as a problem solver with taste, as someone who brings clarity, edge, and results.

What do you like the most in your job?

What I love the most is the moment before everything begins: that first conversation with the client, that first dive into their world. Every new project is a chance to learn, to listen, to challenge my own assumptions.

It’s in that early exchange, between perspectives, cultures, needs and ideas, that real design opportunities emerge. It sharpens my thinking, expands my tools, and keeps me uncomfortable in the best way possible.

That constant exposure to different ways of seeing the world is what makes this job endlessly evolving and never boring.




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