Tips and News on Logo Design and Tutorials — Design & Style

Typographic love: Letters collage

Design & Style

Meg Hitchcock's work is unbelievable. Her pieces consist of grand format collages that are made by hand-cutletters from diverse religious books as the Koran or the Bible and rearranges them in different geometric shapes or in the style of mandalas. The amount of time that each of this collages must have taken is just something I cannot even fathom and her patience and rigurosity...

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Beautiful branding: Grand Central Terminal celebrates 100 years!

Design & Style

The famous NYC landmark Grand Central Terminalis celebrating their 100 years anniversary and what better way to celebrate than a fresh new logo and campaign! Michael Bierut was in charge of this project and took a different approach to the logo scheme, taking the iconic clock that's in the middle of the station instead of keeping the monogram logo they have been using so far. The...

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Logo design reviews: new Ferrari logo

Design & Style

Iconic brands have it tough when it comes to an update to their image, a slight change of hue or a font change will uproar a vast amount of opinions which makes this type of logo design a very tricky one. A world renowned brand like Ferrari can't escape from this criticism and to keep the ball going here's a little review on their updated look.


The iconic Ferrari logo was firstly...

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Great Branding: Good Food

Design & Style

Good branding is essencial when it comes to make a food brand happen. It's difficult enough for companies to convince people to try their food, considering the effort to make a new brand stand out against the competition (that is in a supermarket aisle, i.e.) and even more important, make it appealing! Mexican agency Facewas in charge of the branding project for Good Foods, a...

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Photography love: René Maltête

Design & Style

To finish up the week with a good mood, I'm bringing you here the really clever and humorous photographic work of French photographer René Maltête. Using fairly simple tricks and perfect photographic timing, Maltête works around humour as his main subject but with a permanent underlying social commentary. The pictures have this very non-chalant look to them and even make you...

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