Norway's new passports by design studio Neue, which feature illustrations of the country's landscape that change from day to night under UV light, have been realised after six years of development.
Oslo-based studio Neue won a competition to overhaul the country's passports and ID cards in 2014 with its design.
Entrants were asked to submit a design based on the theme of Norway's landscapes. The primary reason for renewing the passports is to increase their security by making them harder to forge.
The finalised versions of the Neue-designed travel documents have now been unveiled, and include the Norwegian passport, diplomatic passport, emergency passport and travel document.
The exteriors are coloured red, blue, white and navy respectively, as a nod to Norway's flag. A simplified version of the country's crest and the name of the document is embossed in gold on each cover.
Inside the passports and travel documents, each page is printed with a different depiction of the Norwegian landscape, including mountainous scenes with lakes and streams.
These background illustrations work both as decoration and a security element. When the pages are placed under a UV light, the landscape transitions from day to night scenes.
Some pages reveal ribbons of fluorescent blue and green to represent the northern lights, while others illuminate the moon.
"The design has to create a sense of belonging and connection across age, gender and regions in Norway," the studio explained. "Therefore it was important to look at our historical foundation and what in the Norwegian culture that creates a sense of belonging – its nature."
"[Norway's nature] is, and has always been, part of our history," it added. "The landscapes surrounding us give a sense of belonging and pride, and fill a symbolic function for the entire nation."
"Images of scenery and landscape can easily become clichés, but by being widely accepted and deeply rooted in Norwegian culture, they are also very easy to identify with."
"By using illustrations of single parts of a wide Norwegian panorama, we want to show the contrasts in landscapes and climates that have shaped us, offered opportunities and resources, places for recreation and the scenes of important historical events."
Dezeen launched an unofficial competition to redesign the UK passport back in 2017 to imagine what the cover should look like after Brexit.
Scottish graphic designer Ian Macfarlane was awarded first prize with a cover that softly transitions between the burgundy EU passport and the dark blue of the old, pre-EU British passport.
Since then, the UK government confirmed that after Brexit the official British passports will lose their burgundy covers and go back to having dark blue ones like the ones had before it joined the European Union in 1973.