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Timothy Wyllie  was born into a family of architects and marine artists in June 1940 at the outset of World War II. HIs mother, Diana Wyllie, worked for [[British Intelligence]], both in Germany before the war and later at Bletchley Park with the [[Enigma (machine)|Enigma]] code-breakers while his father, George Haswell, was a successful young architect before the war.
 
Timothy Wyllie  was born into a family of architects and marine artists in June 1940 at the outset of World War II. HIs mother, Diana Wyllie, worked for [[British Intelligence]], both in Germany before the war and later at Bletchley Park with the [[Enigma (machine)|Enigma]] code-breakers while his father, George Haswell, was a successful young architect before the war.
 
 
His parents divorced when he was two years old, and after the war, he moved to London with his mother. He was educated at [[Charterhouse Public School]] and qualified as an architect at London's [[Regent Street Polytechnic Architectural School]] in 1964. While at college he invented a system for storing color slides, negative and filmstrips that was subsequently marketed by [[DW Filmstrips]] and became the premier international photographic storage system until the advent of electronic storage.
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His parents divorced when he was two years old, and after the war, he moved to London with his mother. He was educated at [[Charterhouse Public School]] and qualified as an architect at London's [[Regent Street Polytechnic Architectural School]] in 1964. While at college he invented a system for storing color slides, negative and filmstrips that was subsequently marketed by DW Filmstrips and became the premier international photographic storage system until the advent of electronic storage.
 
 
 
After working as an architect in [[London]], he collaborated in the formation of a [[spiritual]] community that came to be known as The Process. For the next 15 years he traveled widely throughout Europe, Canada, and America with the community before settling permanently in the USA in 1969. As Art & Design Director of The Process Magazine, his artwork and graphic design are now considered as seminal in the development of modern magazine design.
 
After working as an architect in [[London]], he collaborated in the formation of a [[spiritual]] community that came to be known as The Process. For the next 15 years he traveled widely throughout Europe, Canada, and America with the community before settling permanently in the USA in 1969. As Art & Design Director of The Process Magazine, his artwork and graphic design are now considered as seminal in the development of modern magazine design.

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