Sunday, November 18, 2012

LOGOS – as they speak!


1.   FEDEX:


It's an amazing work of design that brings two fonts - Univers67 and Futura Bold, together to create a subtle piece of perfect arrow between "E" & "X". It's a very smart act by Landor Associates NOT to make the arrow so prominent in any way and make it a cliché amongst the audience where "Arrow" is the most widely used symbol to depict delivery and speed

P.S. - The fact is, that when Landor Associates presented this logo along with the other 4 logos (out of the designed 200), FedEx CEO Fred Smith was the only one in the room full of executives to notice this arrow. FedEx logo is also considered a clever logo that doesn't reveal its own cleverness because though it's a brilliant piece of graphic branding, most people fail to even notice it.

2.   8 FISH:


8 Fish was a sushi restaurant in LA, California. This logo is designed by Jerron Ames and is one of the best logos that make an exceptional use of the negative space.

3.   5.10:


Five Ten makes footwear for the world's most dangerous sports. It's a smart logo that blends "5" and "10" in a unique way.

4.   Amazon:


It's an extremely clean and a simple logo that gives you a little insight into the philosophy of the brand. The yellow arrow from a to z represents two facts in a very subtle manner –
1.     Amazon sells everything from A to Z.
2.     It also represents a smile that reflects happy and satisfied customers, thus making it a friendly and approachable company

5.   Eight:


This logo of "the Eight Group" musicians is the most cleverly designed logo ever. It's designed with a typeface where every letter of the word "eight" is a variation of the number 8.

6.   Baskin Robbins:


This logo beautifully incorporates "31" in the initials if the two-word brand name, highlighting it in pink color. This "31" stands for what Baskin-Robbins is famous for, it's 31 flavors - one for each day!

7.   Apple:


This logo symbolizes apple from the Adam and Eve story, where it was represented as the fruit of "Tree of Knowledge", with a pun on “byte/bite”. However, Rob Janoff designed this logo with a byte simply to avoid this apple look like a cherry tomato. However, it's also considered to be used in remembrance to Alan Turing, one of the fathers of Modern Computing, who killed himself by biting into an apple laced with cyanide

8.   Eighty20:


It's one geeky logo where the two lines of squares represent a binary sequence, blue squares representing 1 and grey representing 0. This combination comes out to be:
1.     1st line - 1010000 representing eighty
2.     2nd line - 0010100 representing 20.

9.   Museum of London:


It's not just a bunch of colored shapes trying to shadow each other. They are the representation of evolution in the London's geography as it grew over time.

10. The Pittsburgh Zoo:


This is a perfect logo for a zoo, where the white spaces on the sides of the tree make up a monkey and lion staring each other.

11. Sun Microsystems:


Stanford University's Prof. Vaughan Pratt's design of this logo contains four interleaved copies of the word "sun". It is one of the most famous ambigrams that may be read as one or more words not only in its form as presented, but also from another viewpoint, direction or orientation. It's designed in a way that one can read the word “sun” from any direction, and appears to stand on one corner.

12. Goodwill:


The lower case 'g' not only stands as the initial of the brand, but it also represents a smiley, thus giving the customers/viewers a subconscious positive perception of the company.

13. Sony Vaio:


This logo represents the transition between the analog signal (formed by the wave between "V" & "A") and the digital signal where "I" & "O" looks like 1 and 0

14. Audi:


Each of the four rings here represents the four companies that were part of the Auto-Union Consortium in 1932 - DKW, Horch, Wanderer and Audi. AUDI itself stands for Auto Union Deutschland Ingolstadt.

15. Mercedes-Benz:


This very simple logo depicts a lot of power. The star in three corners represents the brand's dominance on land, sea and air.


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