March 17, 2025

Behind The Cover

by Lalin Mercan & Can Yıldırım

Designing a cover for Centre Magazine felt like stepping into a labyrinth—one where the paths weren’t just visual but conceptual, emotional, and even musical. The greatest challenge in creating a cover lies in crafting a design that does justice to the content, the minds behind it, and the intentions guiding the creative process. A cover isn’t just about aesthetics; it’s an engineering of first impressions, a storyteller that builds a relationship with its audience.

To create a cover capable of embodying the multifaceted and diverse essence of Centre—a magazine that spans macro to micro issues, geographies, and disciplines, from business to politics, art to hidden urban beauties—we started with one key question: What does Centre aim to achieve? The answer, as we saw it, was to transform the world’s noise into a signal, turning chaos into meaning. From that moment on, we began to see Centre as a lens offering a fresh perspective—sharpening the focus on diverse voices and ideas—and as a conductor bringing together the vast vitality of the world into a harmonious composition.

For the inaugural issue, we turned to Europe for inspiration. Its complexities, tensions, contradictions, stories, and rhythms. Using everyday sounds shared on open-source platforms, we created an auditory portrait of the continent. The mechanical whir of the Eiffel Tower elevator, the delicate chime of wind bells in Ghent, the fervent chants of a Zurich protest, the ticking of Vienna’s timeless clocks, the cries of seagulls over Istanbul’s Bosphorus, and the echoes of a quarantine concert in Brussels all came together to form this composition.

For the inaugural issue, we turned to Europe for inspiration. Its complexities, tensions, contradictions, stories, and rhythms. Using everyday sounds shared on open-source platforms, we created an auditory portrait of the continent. The mechanical whir of the Eiffel Tower elevator, the delicate chime of wind bells in Ghent, the fervent chants of a Zurich protest, the ticking of Vienna’s timeless clocks, the cries of seagulls over Istanbul’s Bosphorus, and the echoes of a quarantine concert in Brussels all came together to form this composition.

1- Eiffel Tower Elevator, Paris

2- Flower Market Columbia Road, London

3- Hailstorm Recording, Paris

4- London Pub Ambience, London

5- London Train, Quiet Zone,London

6- Plane Cabin Air France Boeing 777-300 ER, Reunion Island to Paris

7- Recording of the Long Player, Trinity Buoy Wharf, London

8- Singing Night Bird Rue du Volga, Paris

9- St. John Chapel Tower of London, London

10- Copper Mine Bell, Selback, Mora, Sweden

11- Tate Britian Louise Bourgeois Exhibition, London

12- Mechanical Clock, Vienna

13- Ping pong table in the IT University, Copenhagen

14- Afternoon on the beach, San Sebastián

15- Piano in the city, Milano

16- Dreaming SMETAK, sound installation after the composer Walter Smetak, Berlin

17- Sonic Snap, part of 6th graders recording project, Gent

18- Wind chime, Gent

19- Trackpad when working, Brussels

20- Lockdown concert, Brussels

21- Moving metal parts and waves at the dock, Stockholm

22- Day 12 of the protest against police violence in Greece, Madrid

23- Museo del Jamón, Madrid

24- Protest chanting against economic crisis, Portugal, Lisbon

25- Traditional Portuguese windmill, Lisbon

26- Bendir playing aksak rhythm, İstanbul

27- Seagulls in Bosphorus, İstanbul

28- Black Lives Matter Protest, Zurich

29- Small bar, Zurich