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

Scott Weaver's Toothpick San Francisco

Design & Style

toothpick-san-francisco

Artist Scott Weaver really wanted to build a miniature model of San Francisco out of toothpicks. So much so that he spent 35 years designing and assembling his 9 feet tall, 7 feet wide and 2 feet deep masterwork, titled "Rolling Through the Bay."

Scott Weaver's Rolling through the Bay from Learning Studio on Vimeo.

Weaver wanted to give movement to his breathtaking, 1,000,000...

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Victor Hertz's Honest Logos

Design & Style

Victor Hertz is a 28-year-old graphic designer from Sweden, and he is making a name for himself with these cheeky (and honest) re-imaginings of legendary corporate logos. In an interview with Newslite, Hertz said most of the time is spent coming up with the concept for each logo, the actual re-design takes just minutes.

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Can You Identify the Airline From Its Logo?

Design & Style Logo & Brand review

@issue- The Online Journal of Business and Design just posted a challenge to their readers. Can you name the airline, just by looking at the tail logo? Airlines put their logos on the highest part of the plane, and they do this so that the logo is the first and last thing you see. Some of these are so iconic that it will be easy for you to name the company. Many of them incorporate the colors...

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Volkswagen's Redesigned 2012 Beetle

Design & Style

2012 volkswagen beetle

The 2012 VW Beetle was unveiled today at events held at the same times in New York City and Shanghai. The newest Beetle has a much lower, slicker design than it's cartoon-ish, bubbly predecessors. Six inches longer, three inches wider and an inch lower than the last model, this redesign will also come with the option of a panoramic sunroof which reaches all the way from the windshield to the back window.

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Dorothy's Stripped Down Logos Art Project

Design & Style

Dorothy, a Manchester ad agency, is showing a series of paintings that would appeal to any graphic design aficionado. The paintings show iconic corporate logos, but stripped of the type and lettering that usually accompany the image, leaving the minimalist shapes behind.

The project is called You Took My Nameand so far the designs created are being displayed on acrylic-on-canvas...

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