Not your average beer

New brand identity for southwest Michigan-based farmstead brewery, River Saint Joe. Design system provides flexibility for a wide range of applications. From packaging to signage, we just love this robust and appealing work. Design by Studio MPLS. Cheers. šŸŗšŸŗšŸŗ

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Major rebrand to reflect future vision and growth

New identity for Regent’s Place, a mixed use business, retail and residential quarter (from 2010) on the north side of Euston Road in the London Borough of Camden. The new symbol represents the three districts — the Knowledge Quarter, Camden and the West End. The new identity, designed by London-base DixonBaxi, looks to capture the area’s future of housing with green space, a deeply rooted sense of community and forward-thinking, sustainable architecture. This contrasts greatly with Regent’s Place’s previous cold corporate identity. The new word mark deploys Bw Gradual for a more elegant and organic feel. The new system brings a new contemporary point-of-view reflecting the brands creative and green ethos. Animation along with reclaimed wood signage, bamboo business cards and soy-based community printing are featured to support the new approach. The entire effort is a huge step forward advancing a more progressive image for this important London neighborhood. We’re sure that it will be embraced by many businesses and residents with open arms. We salute the smart, creative and large scale effort…

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Symbol only + flat logo design now trending

Toyota joins other major car brands by moving to flat logo design. More significantly, it is also removing its word mark from its primary brand identity. The brand refresh by agency The&Partnership for Toyota Europe exclusively, seeks to address digital use where simplified or flat design provides better readability and clarity. A new custom typeface called Toyota Type was also introduced along with a new monochrome color palette featuring a range of grays and an accent red. The new logo design and brand identity system will appear first in Europe with all vehicles still featuring the current logo. Whether the identity will be rolled out globally has not been announced. Certainly, a respectable refresh. We’re curious to see whether the global brand embraces the new European approach.

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Live stream moves into main stream fashion marketing

Shot during a twelve-hour live stream in July 2020, Gucci creative director Alessandro Michele revealed what lies behind the making of a (well-financed) fashion ad. Throughout the course of one day, the campaign features the Gucci design team as models wearing pieces from the Epilogue collection. Two Roman locations, Palazzo Sacchetti and graffiti-covered Campo Boario are add to the eclectic, colorful vintage inspired extravaganza. Shot by Alec Soth and filmed by directors Damiano and Fabio D’Innocenzo. Gucci continues to lead the top tier of fashion brands in creative and innovative use of social media channels. Their growth since Michele took over creative duties is definitive proof of a successful luxury brand today. Bellissimo!

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Simplifying logo + icons for digital applications

Software manufacturer Adobe introduces a brand identity refresh including icons for many of its applications. Like many brands, Adobe is moving to a simpler approach with an evolved color palette. The primary logo has changed to one-color red logo with the color shifted to a slightly warmer shade. This is the first logo change since 1993. Otherwise, the Creative Cloud logo moves from its current red and white design to a white emblem on a rainbow background. The Photoshop and Lightroom logos have evolve to a borderless rounded corner icon with lighter text. Photoshop Camera application will use three letters, adding an uppercase C to the Ps of the Photoshop logo. Nothing too creative or even noteworthy here, just an evolution in line with so many brands with large online users or customers. All sensible choices…

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Wise identity refresh

Travel site Tripadvisor is 20 years old and had decided to rebrand. The well-recognized owl symbol has been refreshed with simpler rounder lines. A new custom typeface (Trip Sans), set of icons and refreshed color palette (ā€˜TripGreen’, orchid, salmon, rose, sand, moss, pine and mustard) adds to the more contemporary identity. Another subtle changes is the company is moving from TripAdvisor to Tripadvisor. The company says users recognize and pronounce the brand as a single word after twenty years of business. Mother Design New York led the identity refresh. We applaud the entire effort. Bold, clear and fresh, the brand is wisely positioned for the return of travel. Bon voyage!

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Playful can be powerful

Early this year, Fisher Price has introduced a major rebrand of its identity. The brand worked with renowned design firm, Pentagram for the brand refresh including a modest update of the logo, a custom typeface and a fun set of graphics playing off of the recent unveiled ā€œLet’s be kidsā€ campaign by advertising agency Wieden + Kennedy.Ā  The new typeface is called Let’s Be Glyphs and offers straight and ā€œbouncyā€ versions to allow for managing the amount of playfulness. The word mark update is subtle, with new lower case initials ā€œfā€ and ā€œpā€, and a hyphen that has become a semi-circular ā€œsmileā€. The new curved graphic also relates to the originalĀ  ā€œawningā€ – the scallop-edged shape the word mark sits on, simplified and redrawn for the brand refresh.Ā  Two new monograms using the brand initials inside a circle and awning shape (ā€œflag tagā€) was designed for flexibility and can include copy, or simply used as a graphic stamp on photography, animations, packaging or store displays, to quickly identify the brand. Once again, Pentagram delivers both a distinctive, smart identity that perfectly captures the personality of this renowned brand. So fun to see, think about and imagine some of the applications or iterations to come. We can all use a little fun…

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Yes, the world is (increasingly) flat

Volkswagen has joined many major brands and introduced its flat design “digital-first” identity. Gone is the dated three-dimensional chrome-effect logo. The new identity was a collaboration between a total of 19 internal teams and 17 external agencies and launches with a line of new electric vehicles. It now displays a flat, two-dimensional design in dark blue. the new mark certainly will be more easily displayed digitally on consumer’s devices as small as a smartwatch and diverse applications. While it is certainly a subtle evolution from the previous identity, execution especially in the digital world, the revamped identity will most likely be a positive thing moving forward. Are you ready for what the future has in store?

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Coronavirus strategies for brands surface

A very poignant new film for Facebook that attempts to position the social media giant as a critical vehicle in bringing us together. The spot, created by Droga5 along with Facebook marketing, starts with emotional images including deserted streets, empty classrooms and picked over grocery shelves. It progresses to emotional images of people in masks, patients in hospitals and family members in tears. The film moves to the more uplifting, with people communicating online (via Facebook, of course), laughing, rejoicing, embracing and being grateful for each other, life and moving forward. All are set to Kate Tempest’s reading of her beautifully haunting poem ā€œPeople’s Facesā€, which was nothing less than a brilliant choice. One can argue that this well-crafted spot shamefully leverages the crisis and places the much-criticized Facebook as some kind of savior. We would argue that despite the social media giant’s missteps, it is an important piece of advertising capturing the unique moment with both emotion and flair. We all could not stop watching it. Does it help Facebook with its image challenges? That is the million (or billion) dollar question…

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Who doesn’t enjoy a good sneaker story?

The Story of Air Max: 90 to 2090. You’ll need some time for this one, but this film is a must for sneakerheads, fashionistas, branding aficionados, pop culture babies, Nike fans and the rest of us. Another amazingly-produced Nike story of its primary shoe brands and how it has become part of cultures around the world. Well-produced film and downright fascinating to watch. Take a break from the crazy world, kick back and enjoy…

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