Branding and Packaging: Popchips
Posted: June 18, 2013 Filed under: Food & Drink, New, Packaging | Tags: Art, branding, chips, craft, crisps, illustration, Marx Design, packaging, paper, Popchips, typography 1 Comment »Popchips is a four flavour range of potato chips from Ping which have been popped – much like popcorn – rather than backed or fried to create a healthier snack. New Zealand-based Marx Design were responsible for developing a new mascot for Ping that could work across multiple products in the snack food category and a packaging solution for the Popchips brand that would “avoid the clichés of traditional chip packaging in order to achieve cut-through.”
Logo and Branding: Mark Cappellino
Posted: June 17, 2013 Filed under: Business, Banking & Finance, Logos & Branding, New | Tags: Art, branding, design, logo, logo-type, Mark Cappellino, Perky Bros, Print, stationery, typography 4 Comments »Mark Cappellino is described by Perky Bros, the Tennessee-based studio behind his new visual identity, as a leadership consultant who travels the worldwide helping individuals and teams better communicate through stronger relationships. Their design solution, “based on the behavioural beliefs that shape his practice”, “plays on the typographic device called the em dash, meaning an interruption of thought” and “comes to life as a red thread which according to Chinese legend connects all of us—tangling, stretching, but never breaking.”
Logo and Branding: Nordic House
Posted: June 12, 2013 Filed under: Logos & Branding, Services | Tags: anagrama, branding, design, dry cleaning, logo, Nordic House, Print, stationery, typography Leave a comment »Multidisciplinary design agency Anagrama have recently completed the visual identity for San Francisco-based dry cleaning shop Nordic House, who alongside their cleaning service sell scented soaps and undershirts. Anagrama describe their approach as focusing on Scandinavian design by combining “simple geometric forms with a clean, sharp, well-distributed logotype and an icy, cold color palette” of snowy white, chilly grey, pine needle green and fresh salmon to “create a cool nordic landscape complete with its pure, immaculate and undisguised scents”. Alongside iconography “designed with a stark and reductionist style” the solution “captures the brand’s elemental emphasis on honesty, clarity and above all, quality.”
Branding and Packaging: Yoosli
Posted: June 11, 2013 Filed under: Food & Drink, Packaging | Tags: branding, cereal, design, food, food muesli, illustration, logo-type, packaging, review, Together, typography, Yoosli Leave a comment »Yoosli is a new online service that enables customers to create their own muesli mix from a choice of over 65 ingredients delivered as a one-off or subscription service to their work or home address. UK-based studio Together Design – commissioned to develop Yoosli’s brand identity and e-commerce website – created a cast of what they describe as eccentric characters, “each of whom represents a different personality and muesli flavour”, alongside a conversational speech-bubble device to convey the ‘joyful’, personalised and ‘creative mixing experience’ provided by the service.
Logo and Branding: Curious Space
Posted: June 10, 2013 Filed under: Architecture & The Built Environment, Art & Design, Logos & Branding | Tags: Art, branding, Curious Space, graphic design, logo, logo-type, Mash Creative, MayNinth, space, typography, visual identity 1 Comment »Curious Space is a London-based scenographers – a specialist scene setter – that creates “unique and inspiring spaces for museums, galleries and more”. Their visual identity, developed by Mash Creative and MayNinth, ‘splits apart to create a physical space that intrigues whilst the type can sit either horizontally or vertically in numerous layouts within the dotted grid”, establishing a flexible and unusual yet structured solution that extracts a proprietary value from the near-neutrality of Gotham’s geometric sans-serif characters.
Logo and Branding: Ali Sharaf
Posted: June 6, 2013 Filed under: Fashion & Photography, Logos & Branding | Tags: Art, Business Card, design, graphic design, logo, logo-type, Mash, Photography, Print, stationery, typography 4 Comments »Ali Sharaf is a Bahrain-based commercial photographer who specialises in fashion, beauty, portrait and lifestyle images for the advertising and editorial sectors, and describes himself as contemporary, upbeat, outspoken and edgy. Inspired by Swiss modernism, design agency Mash Creative developed an identity solution that combines an iconic mark, sans-serif typography, weighty and tactile material choices and a timeless black, white and grey colour palette to ‘communicates Ali’s core brand values’ with a timeless simplicity.
Logo and Branding: CZYK
Posted: June 5, 2013 Filed under: Art & Design, Logos & Branding | Tags: Art, design, Furniture, graphic design, industrial design, lightening, logo, logo-type, typography Leave a comment »CZYK is a Melbourne-based industrial design practice established by Nikolai Kotlarczyk that specialises in contemporary furniture and lighting design for small and large scale production. Longton, the agency behind CZYK’s new visual identity, website and collateral, describe the practice as having a ‘strong focus on functional, high use design based heavily around materiality, production techniques and the environmental lifecycle of each product.’
Branding and Packaging: Sample Brew
Posted: June 3, 2013 Filed under: Food & Drink, Packaging | Tags: Art, Beer, branding, design, label, Longton, packaging, typography Leave a comment »To standout in an increasingly saturated market, boutique brewer Sample commissioned Melbourne-based design agency Longton to brand and package their American-inspired pale ale, slow brewed to the standards of the 1516 German purity law.
Longton’s solution reflects this approach, a purity of ingredients and the brewery’s name with a distinctive and reductionist ‘sample pack’ aesthetic that balances a sense of small-scale, traditional batch production with a contemporary and on-trend utility through a contrast of type-block, grids, single line weight illustrative detail, generously spaced uppercase sans-serif typography, a monochromatic colour palette, the tactile qualities of a rough glass surface treatment, the website’s fusion of modern and responsive design practice and the functionality of Courier New. It is simple but well resolved with very little superfluous detail and a focus on communication, and while it is perhaps bordering on what some might describe as hipster, this feels appropriate for the craft beer market.
May’s Top 5 Projects
Posted: May 31, 2013 Filed under: Logos & Branding, Packaging, Top Five | Tags: Art, branding, design, identity, logo, logo-type, packaging, Print, top 5, typography Leave a comment »These are the five projects I reviewed during May that I felt really stood out and wanted to give them another opportunity to be seen and shared. I have ordered these from five to one with my favourite project presented last.
Do you agree with my choices?











