Posts Tagged ‘brand’

Inspiration: Stranger and Stranger Kraken Label

Friday, March 18th, 2011

Passed down the Twitter corridor (via @keeganmeegan, and @crankypressman with a stop at Monoscope) I was alerted to the beautiful liquor labels by drink brand company, Stranger and Stranger. Let me tell you, their portfolio is beautiful. On the whole, I’d say that they are one of the more consistent designers of quality drink labels (Game Day leaves a bit to be desired, but source material what it is…).

Stranger & Stranger: Kraken Label Stranger & Stranger: Kraken Packaging Stranger & Stranger: Kraken Black Spiced Rum Label Details

I tend to get thrown in the “modernist” style of design, and that’s fine, because, really, it’s true. But I really do appreciate work of other styles/principles. Especially when they’re as beautiful as the Kraken Black Spiced Rum Label. This is what I want from rum. From the vintage jug bottle to the playful, tongue-in-cheek taglines (“Bizarre & Fierce SEA CREATURES as seen through the eyes of imagination”) to the old-world Kraken illustration and the beautiful black badge, you instantly get the vibe you want from rum: seafaring reverie. Without that cheap Captain Morgan stigma. What’s more, the adjectives on the label (“bizarre” and “fierce”) are pretty much the adjectives I want to sum up my rum drinking experience. All this goes to say this is rum you’re gonna enjoy; that it isn’t for Rum & Cokes. This is a beautiful bottle of rum you break out at a party and sip.

The Case of the Undead Content

Tuesday, March 15th, 2011

So, I’m currently engaged in two particular ongoing projects, although, that’s likely underselling them. They’re not so much ongoing as undead. The first one being a redesign and content overhaul of Razterized.com. As you can likely tell, this site is starting to show its age, and it’s a bit thin on the content. That’s really where all the burden comes in.

Content.

Ramping up content for this site has been like surviving a zombie apocalypse. One never-ending run. You see, I got it in my head at some point that it would be a great idea (and it still is) to write up in-depth case studies for just about every project I’ve ever done (or, at least, the ones I want to show). This means pulling sketches, thought processes, colour samples, mistakes, alternate treatments, proposals wireframes, logo specs, client briefs, et al, and attempting to synthesize them all into a concise, pretty little packages for clients to stare at.

This seemed quite the easy task for the first few. Now that we’re on multiples of ten, it seems no longer easy but also like it will never end. I’ve literally been writing case studies since the end of December. Now, granted, this is a back-burner project and that accounts for a good deal of that, but, still. Then there’s the matter of writing it all again in Japanese.

The second is the much ballyhooed Sasquatch project. No, it has nothing to do with the Sasquatch Music Festival, but rather a community for northwest designers and developers past, present and future to just collaborate. I’ve always felt that was one thing that was missing from Seattle’s tech-heavy domain. Sure, you collaborate with your co-workers in an office, but how often do you just sit down with someone from the community-at-large, have some drinks and hash out some really cool ideas? When was the last time we had a web designer jam, or got together to crank out a cool app. My friends and have done that, going on to spawn a start-up game development studio, but, frankly, the impetus was on us. So, Sasquatch would be a forum for things like that to happen. Tweetups, collabo-projects, current going-ons, exhibitions, the like.

The infrastructure of which is just daunting, especially for (and the irony here is not lost on me) a one-man project. It’s about time to branch out and build Sasquatch with spirit it is intended to foster. At least the rough look & feels are done, see?

snippet of the Sasquatch header layout and type treatments

snippet of the Sasquatch header layout and type treatments

Grid and copy looks & feel

Grid and copy looks & feel

Copy type treatments

Copy type treatments

Typography heavy designs, of course. Typography still rules the world. Even if it won’t get content written.

Kit Kat: 桜抹茶 「Sakura Maccha」

Sunday, June 6th, 2010

The last Kit Kat I reviewed was the Limited Kyoto Itokyuemon Uji-Maccha (宇治抹茶) and knowing that I had another maccha Kit Kat in store, I wanted to do them back to back to compare and contrast. The Kyoto variety is easily one of my favorite Kit Kat, with it’s smooth, earthy, honest green tea style. So, this set of fingers really had a lot to live up to.

桜抹茶「Sakura Maccha」Kit Kat

First, packaging. This flavour came out at about the same time as the White Coffee flavour (namely spring) and if you remember, I took issue with the sakura packaging of the white coffee Kit Kat. It just didn’t make sense there. Here of course, it does. I quite like the packaging here. A Traditional sized box, with the the common Nestle Kit Kat brand is present, of course, but the box itself is a vibrant green that plays beautifully against the pink place setting and sakura blossoms. Of course, on the southeast corener, there is a similarly green cup of maccha. This is successful because not only does it appropriately sell the flavour, but the colors are lively and eye catching. I admit that when searching through the Nestle website, this packaging was one of my favorites. The bittersweet colour palette was interesting and engaging and paired with the flavour itself, wonderfully exciting.

The interior wrapper is understated, but carries through with the brand. A green gradient to white and a pink gradient to white are at both ends. Besides looking appealing, it makes note of a soft blending of the two flavours. Let’s hope that’s what we get!

Opening the package, again, there was no strong green tea aroma like the last Kit Kat, unless I really went searching for it. They smelled of a sweetened green tea dessert, like Haagen Daz green tea ice cream with no real hint of sakura. In fact, there was a pretty strong chocolate scent before there was anything sakura. Colour-wise, the fingers were almost identical to those from Kyoto (which isn’t surprising they’d use the same dye numbers).

桜抹茶「Sakura Maccha」Kit Kat

On the first bite, if I’m honest, I found nearly no green tea. Instead, it was mostly the sweet of the white chocolate and a very spicy version of sakura (like cinnamon, perhaps). I hadn’t really known what to expect from the sakura in these. I had really hoped for a strong, bitter taste of sakura pickled in ume as that would be quite exciting. If I had to say what the taste was like, I’d say it was a milder version of the Tokyo-style sakuramochi I’d had before as it was a slightly sweet, bland sakura flavour (as if introduced to azuki). Also, perhaps like sakura ice cream which is usually more delicate in flavour.

Through the first finger, I didn’t really get the green tea at all. On the second one, I could taste it initially before becoming consumed by the azuki-like sakura flavour. Sampling just a bit of the chocolate I found that it was meant to convey the green tea flavour, but it was mild inside the sweet white chocolate. I like a real earthy maccha, not sweet. This definitely was of the latter. It has also become quite apparent that the filling of the wafer in Japanese Kit Kat will be the most dominant flavour. In the Kyoto snacks, there was definitely maccha filling and thus had a strong maccha flavour; these it’s inverted.

The filling in these also seemed, for whatever reason, creamier than other bars. On a presentation note, however, the filling is quite disappointing. The wafer are regularly colored with simple white filling. It would have been nice to see a bright pink or fuchsia filling. The fingers would have looked really interesting.

Overall, the flavour of these are really, really tough to judge. As a sakura-maccha snack, they fail pretty horribly. I can almost never get a sense of the maccha. However, the “spicy” sakura/azuki flavour is really quite delicious. I could eat these all day and actually, now that I’ve finished this box, I dare say I’d like some more. A great taste, horribly misrepresented.

Flavor: 7.5/10 (would have been a solid 8 had these not mentioned maccha at all)

Presentation: 4/10

Packaging: 9/10

The packaging was really solid here: colourful, engaging and interesting; a selling point on its own. The presentation of the snacks themselves left a bit to be desired. I like the “maccha” colour of the chocolate (quite possibly the same as the Kyoto snacks) but the filling and wafers are boring, uninspired. The flavour was fantastic, a mild spiciness reminiscent of sakura-azuki desserts that wasn’t too sweet either.

How do they compare to the Kyoto Uji-Maccha Kit Kat? They don’t. There’s hardly any maccha flavor here whereas the Kyoto fingers are packed full of them. If you’re after maccha flavour, try those. If you’re after a unique maccha flavour, don’t look here. Try these only for the sakura in them.

Kit Kat: ミックスジュース「Mixed Juice」

Friday, May 14th, 2010

One thing about being marooned in the States is that it becomes increasingly more difficult to sample and enjoy the various flavored Kit Kat from Japan. I’m either at the mercy of local importer/supermarket Uwajimaya, or, as the case is now, they need to be sent to me. Fortunately, a box of nine to ten different flavors of Kit Kat was just sent to me by my wonderful girlfriend, so, I have more Kit Kat to try, eat and enjoy.

One of these flavours was ミックスジュース, or Mixed Juice. Some background on this flavor: Mixed Juice is, to think of it in U.S. terms, fruit punch (though often served like a smoothie). However, Japanese fruit punch is considerably different than fruit punch stateside. Unlike Hawaiian punch (see “fruit drank“), Mixed Juice actually tastes like fruit. The choice of fruit is much different also. Commonly used are strawberries, bananas and peaches.

ミックスジュース「Mixed Juice」Packaging

Moving on to the Kit Kat itself (or the packaging, rather), it has the traditional Kit Kat brand, with simply drawn vector peaches, strawberries and bananas as wells a glass of mixed juice with straw, and a scary doll like girl enjoying a sip of mixed juice. As you might expect, it’s very colorful (ミックスジュース being rainbow colored). It’s nothing special, but plays more for a younger audience and at least gets the point across. You know (or, you hope you know) what flavors will be in the Kit Kat and what it will taste like.

ミックスジュース individuals

Individually wrapped minis.

I enjoyed the wrapping of the individual mini-fingers quite a bit more. The wrapper is a soft canary color, with one color vector fruit, and two color vector glass of juice. This brand just seemed more together and solid.

Admittedly, the fruit flavored Kit Kat can be a real hit or miss bunch. Some are really good, some are not so good, and some are just bizarre and Nestle will keep making strawberry flavored Kit Kat until they get it right. Honestly, I wasn’t too sure about Mixed Juice. In my experience when they try to mix multiple flavors that don’t really lend themselves to chocolate into a chocolate snack, it’s a bit unfocused and disastrous.

Upon cracking the wrapper, I was greeted with a really pleasant smell reminiscent of fruit cocktail. I don’t know how many people out there eat fruit cocktail, but there was a  time and a place where I would eat can after can of fruit cocktail. It was a pleasant surprise.

The fingers are an unnatural tangerine or mango color orange made with white chocolate and definitely smell EXACTLY like fruit cocktail. The interior wafers are sadly, just a solid, plain wafer brown.

When first bit into, the fruit cocktail greeting is still heavily noticeable, but quickly disappears under and overwhelming peach flavors, which is very peachy and quite nice. That initial burst of peach is then replaced with banana at the end, and the white chocolate gives the whole thing a nice banana milk finish (if you’ve ever had the Nesquick banana milk, that is, not the Korean variety). What was absent was definitely the strawberry, except for a SMALL touch of tartness at the end, I guess. Nestle still doesn’t seem to know what to do with strawberry. Regardless, the milky combination of peach and banana was enjoyable and reminds of a smoothie. Not bad by any means. I didn’t miss the strawberries, really. Due to the “chocolate” being white, these small Kit Kat are considerably sweeter than a smoothie. While eating them, I didn’t feel the sweetness too much (to its credit) but after finishing, it definitely felt like I’d gotten enough sugar.

Overall, I enjoyed these as a fruit smoothie Kit Kat.

Flavor: 6/10

Presentation: 4/10

Packaging: 4/10

Awesome Concept: Design Swap

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

Thanks to following Paddy Donnelly (@paddydonnelly) on Twitter, I was alerted to an experiment if you will, that Yaron Schoen and Trent Walton have started. The concept is a great salve for something that unless you’re making your bones on the “circuit” well, you probably don’t have: a great continuity with designers outside your network.

The idea is, hand over a piece of your website (like a blog post) to another designer, let them design it and return the favor in kind. Not only do you (hopefully)  get to exchange familiarities with another designer, but, you also get a second pair of eyes on your brand, which is always a good thing.

Anyway, yeah, check out Design Swap. It’s great. I wonder if anyone out there I know would be interested at giving it a go?

http://design-swap.com/

CASE STUDY: Cognitive Communications, Inc. Identity

Sunday, March 28th, 2010
Cognitive Communications, Inc. Identity

Originally brought on to give them a true web presence, our first step was an honest content audit. This included pooling together all written and branded materials. Upon doing so, we concluded that content was a bit shallow, especially in the form of truly branded materials. The client had business cards, and a logo that they had done themselves with multi-colored type. It wasn’t so much a brand or identity. We came to the conclusion that prior to developing new materials for the client, it would be best to pin down a succinct identity/brand.

From the start, there were concepts I wanted to try. Although them term cognitive implies its own associated vocabulary (thought, mind, brain, etc), I was drawn to a word inside cognitive: cog. Cognitive Communications, Inc. is a company that helps young individuals and their parents with proper development. This development is brought along with a series of exercises and processes. Cogs are an important piece in mechanical processes, hence the association.

Cognitive Communication Brand sketches

The quick five minute cocktail sketches

I went about sketching. Admittedly, it didn’t go so well. Using a true representation of a cog was too mechanical, too industrial. It was not a good representation of the client or its business. In fact, it was a bit frightening. I switched gears (pun intended) to sketching more abstract cogs, and even ignored it completely with other associations.

Once there a suitable amount of sketched options that I didn’t hate, I moved over to Illustrator. The first thing I wanted to do was select a typeface. I had an idea of where I wanted to go based on the clients’ type of work. With the typeface, I wanted to achieve a “softer” feel, something more “amiable.” That would eliminate all serif typefaces and any blocky sans-serif typefaces. I wanted rounder, curvier sans-serif typefaces and I probably didn’t want any weights above a medium. It was important to have a typeface selected first as I wanted to use the letterform of the “o” in a few samples as the base of the cog.

Cognitive Communications Typography Test

Cognitive Communications Typography Test

I ran down a simple test of ones I knew were more what I was after: Aquiline, Trade Gothic, AG Old Face, Avenir and Geneva. Immediately, Aquiline and Trade Gothic stood apart based on the wonderful letterforms of the lowercase “g.” Only Trade Gothic contained a looped descender while Aquiline had more character with a teardrop shape.

Cognitive Communications Brand "G"

Time to build icons/design elements. Honestly, most of them didn’t go so well. They felt off the mark, especially when wedged in as the letter “o” in cognitive. I then kept them separate as icons. That didn’t really work either. At that point, I left my sketched behind and just started cutting up letterforms. It wasn’t until I removed the ascending “.” of the “i” and used a square piece from the cog in its place that I really felt I was on to something.

In back and white samples, it still didn’t connect, so I decided to add some color. I knew that I was going to apply more colors to this brand than I normally would. The previous client logo was a rainbow (think Google), they worked with children and, in their work, they use something called a “spectrum” which I wanted to achieve with color as a metaphor.

I liked the example better with color, but it still wasn’t perfect. I removed the cog, and used the multi-colored squares in place of the regular “i” forms. Not yet ready. Cutting up the ascender in the lowercase “t” I replaced it with one of the multi colored squares. Having the color spectrum across the middle of cognitive was something I liked, but it had no connection, no association and just seemed to be designed that way “just because.” Never a good reason.

The segmented, multi-colored squares did remind me of something: an assembly line, which, interestingly, connected with the concept of a cog. My next step was simple: grab the rest of the colored squares I had used on the cog, and put them together. The result was -abstractly – a process, from start to finish.

The finished Cognitive Communications identity

The finished Cognitive Communications identity

Rueminations: Homegrown, 3416 Fremont Ave N, Seattle, WA

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

Rue – a street or road (French). Rumination – to meditate or muse; ponder. Rueminations – to dissect, analyze, inspect or appreciate design found on the streets.

Rueminations logo

I’m hoping that many of you are familiar with The Sartorialist, what might be considered the standard as far as street fashion/photography/journalism is concerned in the blog-age. There are many others, mostly based on location like Japan, Korea or Toronto. There’s even Street Peeper. Rueminations, you could say, is similar. Instead of keeping an eye on fashion, however, I’ll be keeping my eye on signage, billboards, storefronts and the back of cars, looking for great typography, color and overall aesthetically pleasing graphic design. It’s something as a designer I do anyway (I’ve gotten separated from friends many times as I stop to ponder a company logo), it will be a good resource for aspiring designer as well as old, and I feel that companies with good design (and their designers) deserve some love.

First up is a sandwich shop in the Fremont neighborhood, Homegrown. Beyond being a pretty darn good sandwich shop (the Bluffernutter blows my mind), it has a brand and logo combination that easily trumps everything else in the wannabe trendy Fremont neighborhood.

Homegrown's signage all lit up

photo credit: Rachel: Photo Diary, http://www.rachelphotodiary.com/ used without permission.

A simple, clean typographic treatment (of which is unmistakably Garamond) with a single artistic mark fashioned out of the letterform of the ‘g’ which makes an easily distinguished rooted vegetable.

The Garamond typeface which is kerned slightly tighter than normal helps give an upscale and rich atmosphere. With the tradition of Garamond, it also speaks to a rich heritage of craftsmanship as if to say this store is handcrafted, artisanal, which it is.

On top of that, the rooted vegetable screams organic, which again, the sandwiches are, and are crafted to appeal to those who shop at places like Trader Joe’s, PCC or Whole Foods and want healthy, homegrown, organic alternatives for their lunch break.

That makes the name itself genius as, instead of trying to hint at what a place is or does, it comes right out and says it: Homegrown.

It’s a bit tough to tell with the signage lit up, but Homegrown also employs a simple two, three color scheme for their brand. Their signage in daylight is simple white on what looks to be maybe a 60-70% black.

Homegrown's signage in daylight

photo credit: Fremont Universe, http://www.fremontuniverse.com/ photo used without permission.

The rest of their branded materials – including their website – deploy the logo in a solid black on a background that looks like scanner paper sacks. This speaks to the concept of “unfooled around with.” The logo is simple, presented with simple colors. The logo itself is a work of art, made of simple, uncluttered elements…exactly like the sandwiches in the shop.

I don’t know who designed the logo/identity/brand – I’m still trying to pin that down – but I gotta say, this is absolutely a hit. They should definitely be proud.

UPDATE:

(4/8/10) I was recently contacted by the graphic designer behind Homegrown! His name is Dax Borges and the logo was designed and developed by him and the co-owner of Homegrown, Ben Friedman. So, there you go, big props go out to them.

This is what Dax had to say:

Hi Mike,
My friend and co-owner of Homegrown (Ben Friedman) just sent me the link to your Homegrown signage article… Can’t tell you how much I appreciate the kind words. Ben and I worked long and hard on that logo. I’m the graphic designer but Ben played a major roll in refinement and overall branding. It would only be half what it is without us working together.

Either way your observation of our hard work is awesome and speaks a lot to your own design and brand sense.

Thanks again for the writeup!

Of course, Dax has a website, and I’d be remiss if I didn’t pass the link along:

daxdigitaldesign.com

Credits:

Original articles from which the images were taken can be found below:

http://www.fremontuniverse.com/2009/03/31/homegrown-sandwich-shop-off-to-good-start/

http://www.rachelphotodiary.com/2009/03/20/homegrown-fremont-seattle-coming-soon/

CASE STUDY: Capture Press Identity

Monday, March 8th, 2010

Capture Press logo

Capture Press aimed to be an internet and print-on-demand publishing platform. They wanted eschew the traditional relationship that writers have with their publishers, which is to say, there isn’t one. When there is, it’s the publisher wanting something from the writer, wanting it now, and without any say in it from the writer. This was different, all the power and 100% of the proceeds from published materials were meant to go to the writers. The website would pay for itself hosting free content to bring in traffic, as well as hosting a strong community for the writers to meet and benefit from each other.

Before any of that could happen, however, the client needed not only a brand/identity, but a concept and a name. That’s where Razterized and I came in. The client was familiar with me as a writer first, and realised that I’d best be able to identify with their needs and execute their goals when it came to design related elements.

The first step was to address the client name.

Naming Capture Press

The client and I had talked at length about the goals of this venture, and the attitude it should carry. It was meant to be revolutionary publishing, “giving the power back to the serfdom” in the writer-publisher relationship. It was meant to be publishing for a new age. The mind immediately ventures toward thoughts of great societal constructs being crippled under a revolution. The fall of any great government. The burning of Rome. There’s a danger in using something like that for a company name, though. It might lead customers to believe it’s a choice based on genre, not mission. The only things we could come up with that were even slightly decent along this path were “Grey Culture Publishing,” “The Fourth Estate” and “The December Press.” Which is to say, I chose a different direction.

The final product needed to sound fresh, new and exciting. Not traditionally used as a company name, but versatile, and describing a forward action of some kind are action verbs. Words like acquire, defer, and improve, etc. They’re also vanilla enough so that they wouldn’t be associated with genre first.

Pouring through several lists of action verbs, as well as any others I could think of, I compiled a list of action verbs I thought would work well.

List of possible action verbs for client name

A List of possible action verbs for client name.

Afterward, I had the above list of twenty-eight action verbs. To narrow down the selection, I ran through each verb, applying to it any associations I had to see if they fit the tone we were trying to reach. After the litmus test, I had narrowed it down to the ten that I thought as standalones sounded the best.

I was left with launch, attract, inspire, uncover, transform, defend, gather, solve, upgrade and capture. I then asked the client for three terms (nouns) that they wanted their product to encompass that I would then pair with the action verbs. They said, “excitement, imagination and suspense.”

With that information in hand, I went back to pen and paper pairing the verbs with the nouns.

The paired up action verbs and nouns

As I moved onto this part of the process, it became quite clear that some of these – while sounding great on their own – didn’t work very well when paired up, and moved too far away from our goals. It was important to make sure that the pairs worked, too, because the verb/noun pairs could easily work as taglines for branded materials.

The finalist action verbs for the client name

Afterward there were five clear winners.

I had narrowed the initial list of twenty-eight down to five: capture, upgrade, transform, uncover and launch.

Now with the action verbs, I wanted to create concrete company/business names. Simply “Capture” or “Transform” just wouldn’t work so much. I decided to pair each up with a couple industry-standard terms that everyone would understand: press and publishing. I also wanted to pair them with some other non-standard terms like vault, repository, registry, and library.

This worked with mixed results, and on pen and pan I wrote down the lists, then went over them over and over again, making notations about what wasn’t working.

The annotated company name list

Some were too wordy, some too genre and others just too dry.

At the end of making all my notations, I’d had a good group of ten workable names, but wanted to narrow it down further for the client presentation. I kept only Capture Press, The Upgrade Repository (my personal favourite), Transform Publishing, The Unlock Registry and Launch Press. Materials and a cleaned up presentation in hand, it was time to visit the client.

Throughout the meeting, two stood out in the client’s mind. Transform Publishing was too much of a commentary on what they were aiming to do, The Unlock Registry just didn’t make enough sense and The Upgrade Repository was too flashy and abstract. They loved both Capture Press and Launch Press. They really didn’t know how to choose between these two. It came down to my opinion. I went back through my notes and scribbles and got back to the original pairing of the action verbs with the three vital nouns.

Capture Excitement! Capture Imagination! Capture Suspense! vs. Launch Excitement! Launch Imagination! Launch Suspense! Side-by-side, to me, Capture was clearly the stronger of the sets. Launch just seemed to be a starting point for each of these descriptive nouns whereas Capture seemed to already have these things, own these thing, taken by force. In this context, Capture seemed much more provocative. The client agreed.

We had our name: Capture Press.

Drafting a Logo

The first thing I want to do when drafting a logo are a series of “cocktail sketches.” I call them these because of the old idea of drawing or writing on cocktail napkins. I have several smaller notebooks that I will use, scribbling logo concepts into. These are often very rough sketches, in various states of completion. They’re just there to get my mind rolling, or the conceptualise what I see in my head. As you can see, they’re pretty crude.

A sample cocktail sketch of Capture's logo

A sample page of Capture's "cocktail sketches."

From the instant we had decided upon Capture Press, I had a central theme I wanted to explore: handcuffs. Little says “capture” quite like handcuffs, and the circular shape lent itself perfectly to the letterforms of the client initials, “c” and “p.” A majority of my early sketches reflect an attempt to make that work. Other rough concepts centered around my associations for capture, like escapism, prisons, lassos and Houdini.

Afterward, I’d go back refining these sketches in better detail, picking apart the ones that might work, perfecting the ones that would and discarding the rest.

Then it was time to step into Adobe Illustrator, and get the best concepts dialed down, cleaned up and properly treated with type samples. A smattering of them included:

The iconography and type samples

The iconography and type samples.

I still liked the concept of the handcuffs, but it became obvious that trying to force the “p” was not working. Not to mention that there was an associated element of inappropriateness to the handcuff motif. The stand alone “c” above the serif capturepress was effective, but was perhaps too traditionally print-like. I also decided to leave the more circular typefaces at home in favour of gothic typefaces. I quickly settled upon Alternate Gothic No. 2 as the best option. I still liked the joined handcuffs inside the circle above a simple CAPTURE treatment, as well as the simplified concept of the keyhole. I’d also still be willing to tug at the “c” handcuff icon.

I ended up presenting just these two:

The presented logo concepts

The client liked both, but concluded, as I did that handcuffs might not be the correct style of iconography, no matter how cleanly it was presented. They also insisted that the term “press” be brought back into the logo. I showed a few samples of that logo with press beside it, below it, struggling with the balance of weight that adding press took away from the lock-element, finally settling on the approved logo:

The finished logo

We have a winner!

I’ll save for another post how we expanded the identity into a full brand across web and printed collateral.