![]() ![]() Today, post-Trump, post-Cummings, mid-pandemic, we long for truth and transparency. ![]() Super-reflective metallic crests made the leap from car bonnets to the printed page, amoebic globes and amorphous blobs clung to wordmarks, and nameless dripping liquids strained bandwidth as they animated home pages. Curves, contours and complex colour gradients were deceiving the eye everywhere you looked. In 2007, the creative world was in thrall to skeuomorphic user interfaces and 3D icons. ![]() Much has changed in logo design since the original edition was published. It’s a major transfusion of new material and a few classics, collected and selected from around 100 of the most accomplished and original practitioners in the field. ![]() Around a third of the wordmarks and symbols from the first book have gone, replaced by 600 of more recent vintage, bringing the total number of marks up to 1,500. The content of the book is tangibly different. Fourteen years on from its original publication, it’s high time things changed. There’s a lot that’s different about the new edition of my book, Logo, which has just been published by Laurence King. ![]()
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