Monday, July 09, 2007

Giving the logo space

You see it everywhere.



It's all around us but usually goes unnoticed.

And it's a disease - we need to take action today to stop it spreading!

Thankfully this disease is curable and I'm here to help you recognise symptoms of this damning condition and to help you STAMP IT OUT!



The disease is: Logo clear space impingement.



Mostly this is seen on PowerPoint presentations where business people have pinched a logo from a website and crammed it onto a heavily laden slide (the contents of which can't be digested anyway) and omitted to give the logo some breathing space. OK- not so critical, but check out this on the new Grand Arcade building in Cambridge:


















I mean..on a building! With an amazing brand like John Lewis!?





Give the logo some room dammit! Compare it to the John Lewis website here:

You'll see that I'm not talking about miles of space around the mark; just enough to comfortably recognise it as John Lewis and for it to 'feel' comfortable in its own space!

The reason that when I see this I get slightly uncomfortable is because the logo, which identifies the company and to a certain degree projects corporate values of John Lewis, feels cramped, squished in, about to fall off, unable to breath and at worst: an afterthought. Logos need this white space around them not only to give it a good sense of proportion but to enable a consistent feel across all media so we can easily recognise it time and time again without thinking. OK so John Lewis is a good, solid recognisable brand but if the white space is built into the logo usage visual clarity is maintained and reinforced.




Save the logo now!




Give it air and space to breathe properly....!











1 comment:

Zebra said...

Some good examples here. Logos deserve more respect! More about 'white space' beyond the world of design.

http://zebraventures.blogspot.com/2007_07_01_archive.html

K