Tips and News on Logo Design and Tutorials

Microsoft Launching Internet Explorer 9 at SXSW

Industry News

Most web-savvy people consider Internet Explorer to be the browser dinosaur that just won't die. It's been the thorn in the side of all web designers and programmers for years.

"Okay, all done the site design. Lets check functionality...looks good on Firefox, Safari, Chrome, Netscape. Perfect!! Oh yeah, some people still use Internet Explorer - better check it out on ther....DOH!!!"

Read more →


MIT Media Lab's New Algorithmic Logo

Logo & Brand review

MIT Media Lab Identity, 2010 from readyletsgo on Vimeo.

MIT Media Lab hired Brooklyn-based designers E Roon Kang and Richard The to come up with the perfect visual identity. The resulting logo is genius at work, an algorithmic logo that generates a unique image for each of the Lab’s team members. The logo has three intersecting spotlights that can be organized in any of 40,000 shapes and 12 color combinations using a customized algorithm.

Read more →


Is This the New Google Chromium Logo?

Logo & Brand review

It appears that Google may be updating the the logo of its browser, according to a report from CNet's Steven Shankland. A change in the public source code repositories of Google's Chromium browser has seen this new logo, showing off different shades of blue, change from the 3D object into this two dimensional logo.

Read more →


Abercrombie & Fitch Sues Surf Style Over Logo

Industry News

The legal battle between Abercrombie & Fitch and Surf Style, centers on a flying seagull logo on Surf Style clothes that Abercrombie says is too similar to one used by its Hollister clothing chain, which has over 500 stores. Surf Style is a beachwear shop with 24 locations.

Read more →


Design Showcase - Movie Barcodes

Design & Style

Movie Barcode, a Tumblr blog, takes legendary full-length films and compresses them so small that they end up looking like colorful bar codes. Let's say you had the largest wide-screen display in the universe, and you stretched out the bar codes, well, then you would actually see the entire movie, frame by frame.

Read more →