Posts Tagged ‘Brand Identity’

Ripe is a testament to a richly talented generation of new Australian designers.
Heroes. Influences. Dreams. This book does not look back. Instead, it is a celebration of the potential of those who will be the heroes of tomorrow’s generation of designers. The book is about today’s young talent. Be inspired by their work. Rest in the comfort that Australia’s design future is in the right hands. The designers featured have much in common. All aspire to reach a level of unsurpassed quality, all have established themselves as some of the future leaders within their given discipline and all of them provide us with inspirational work. This vibrant and innovative book charts exciting new directions in Australian design.

Nice Book, Nice Rap, Nice Company.

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The Typographic Hero of every Brand Identity
An interesting fact I was reading somewhere recently- did you know the most common typeface in brand identity design across the world and across every market is Helvetica (or it’s ugly step brother Arial)?  Not only is Helvetica the most common typeface, but it is-so by a country mile. That alone should be cause enough for every self respecting brand identity designer to shy away from the font like a vampire from daylight.

When designing the visual language of brand identities we always pay particular attention to the typefaces we select to represent our clients. Imagine a world where every piece of type design was carefully considered, craftily engineered, and uniquely beautiful. “Preposterous! There aren’t enough typefaces in the world” I hear you shout. Perhaps, but perhaps it is more a case of there not being enough fonts on your designer’s hard drive, or enough hours in the day for the world’s designers to spend crafting unique typoheavenly concoctions. Spurred-on by this thought I raided my personal photo library for examples of unique type design from the most unlikely of sources. I’ve long been aware of my design infliction which is likely to see me on my family holiday zooming in on a piece of retro signage typography, whilst the rest of the world is facing the other way and shooting picture postcard shots of the Eiffel Tower, the Colosseum, or Trafalgar Square. Sad but true, just ask my wife.

brand designers melbourne

Store Type_Barcelona_2009

So here is this rogues gallery of unlikely type design. Each image an uncompromised, unhelveticast, uncommonly curious, sideshow of type design.

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brand designers

It all Starts with Brand Clarity
Like all of the hardest working brand communication campaigns, this little gem for Mitchum from the US has at its core a clear brand proposition hard-wired with with customer benefit. Mitchum is an antiperspirant brand with a well defined proposition – America’s Hardest Working Antiperspirant. As with all brands – having absolute clarity around their brand strategy – what you stand for and your differentiated proposition provide the basis for creative communication campaigns that work harder and smarter than the rest. Mitcham took their ‘Hardest Working’ proposition and leveraged it into an integrated brand marketing campaign to find America’s hardest workers. However, not happy to sit on the strength of the idea, it is the quality of the execution of the Mitchum campaign that have delivered on the promise of the brand.

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Following on from our post ‘Coffee Avenue – A Great Brand Experience on Wheels’Kelvin Natural Slush Co., the brainchild of yet another corporate refugee turned foodie entrepreneur, just recently hit the streets
in NYC, offering a more sophisticated version of a childhood favorite — the slushie.

In an effort to adultify the slushie experience, this premium, all natural brand offers “more sophisticated,
less sweet” flavours like Spicy Ginger, Tangy Citrus, and Green & Black Tea, to which you add any number of fresh-fruit purées…and to really take it to a dessert-worthy beverage add a scoop of ice cream for a slushie float.
They also apparently make good mixers, but you’ll have to supply your own booze.

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brand design, local governementRecently our Director of Design Derek Carroll was interviewed for an article on Local Government Branding in Government News – the leading national magazine for all levels of Government in Australia. The article features many of Derek’s views on designing brand identity for Local Government as well as some of our brand design work developed for the City of Stonnington and the City of Whittlesea over recent (and not-so-recent) years.

As a brand design agency we have developed brand strategies, brand identities and brand communications programs for many Local Government clients including; the City of Melbourne, the City of Stonnington, the City of Glen Eira, the City of Port Phillip, the City of Whittlesea, the City of Whitehorse, the City of Yarra, the City of Kingston, the Shire of Yarra Ranges, and the Shire of Moira.

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The Most Comprehensive Trend Report on the Visual Language of Brand Identity
Trends in the visual language of brand identity are driven by many factors from the ‘me-too-ism’ of designers and their clients mimicking the visual language of market leaders, to new and emerging trends such as ‘sustainability’ that draw a similar and en-mass visual response from designers all over the world. Over the past 12 months we have collected more than five thousand different brand expressions spanning almost every major industry and category of the western world.

Our 2010 Trend Report has been picked-up and re-published in blogs and marketing publications around the world – so by request we’re providing the report as one, complete pdf download (even if it is a whopping 6.8mb in size).

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Came across these amazing paintings by Mark Goings, a realism painter with work featured in galleries all round the world. Love the subject matter – somehow it suits the more-real than real surreal feel of these pics (really!). The evocative feel of the images provides a rich palette for a thousand brand stories. For anyone who’s picked-up a paint brush – the technique is beyond sublime (if there’s such a place).

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Last month the latest Nike Stadium location opened its doors – the Bowery Stadium in New York City.
Nike Stadiums reflect the trend of many brands (especially those in retail) towards what we call soft brand messaging. Unlike traditional advertising whose function is to deliver a sharp proposition that communicates a specific offer, soft brand messaging is all about giving people a brand experience to create a positive emotional bond with a brand. Brands we care about, brands we believe are a reflection of the way we wish ourselves to be seen own a distinctly unfair advantage when it comers to making conscious and unconsidered buying decisions. Whether buying a $5 burger to a $500k sports car, when it comes to the heart ruling the head, those brands we love hold the whip hand.

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Keeping Your Brand Promises
The BP oil disaster has now been spewing oil since April 20th. It is a disaster of epic proportions. One wonders what will happen to BP. Its share price is down, the pipe still not repaired and it seems like the clean up is an impossible task. The images and videos that have been circulated the internet are both heart wrenching and frustrating.
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The Front Door at Truly Deeply Studio

The Story of the Truly Deeply brand identity
It was shortly after the relationship between Storm and BrandDNA was made official that we made the decision. A decision we felt we would recommend to any client in a similar position. Stop wasting energy supporting two brands and focus your resources on one. It wasn’t that there was problems with the old brands, we loved them, and still do. It was that we had a new offer, that couldn’t be successfully represented by one or the other. So nearly three years ago, on a planning weekend down the Mornington Peninsula, we made the choice. It was time for Storm and BrandDNA to fade away and be replaced by a brand that truly represented the new brand design ethos of the new company.

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