This year, three thoughts occurred to me.
One.
Now more than ever, perhaps because they make up a majority of the world’s
early adapters and drivers of trends, we look to children and adolescents for
insight into what will become the next big thing.
We’ve
known for some time, and I addressed in last year’s Trend Report, that the size
of our digital viewing ports – I understand the layman calls them screens –
continues to get smaller and smaller. And need I mention the affect devices
such as the Apple Watch will have this phenomenon?
And
for those of you thinking, “On the contrary Bill, the iPhone 6+ and monstrous
Galaxy W (seriously, that thing is bigger than my toaster) suggest that the
pendulum is swinging back the other way toward larger screens,” I ask you to
consider the latest TV models that, while the size of small cars, also
incorporate these new symbols and icons into their user interfaces.
So
as we toil to conform to these new parameters, designers are developing a new
set of iconography, and the adolescents, children, even infants of today are
experiencing a very different visual dynamic than generations before them.
For
example, a cloud has a different meaning today than a decade ago. The two
seminal logos that launched a thousand stripes – the “stars in motion” 1984
Summer Olympics logo and Saul Bass’ AT&T logo – were fantastic designs at
the time, but the concept was so overused in the years following that they now
have a dated appearance.
So,
my prediction is that the airy, open, consistent mono-line solution will
eventually be so ubiquitous and overused that it will begin to seem dated,
possibly becoming the “mauve” of the 2010-2019 decade. In fact, we’re already
seeing designers coloring in between the mono-lines to add surface back into the
design, so we come full circle once again.
Consideration
for the future: more symbols are being born every day, so what will the symbol
be for 3-D printing? This trajectory used to relate only to words and ideas,
but with the abundance of visual corkboards (ahem, Pinterest) and how-to
resources, the world is becoming more visually opinionated.
The
good news is that people are embracing creativity and are interested in design,
and this generation will be more visually astute and capable of forming their own
pathways.
As
well, the popularity of life hacks and sustainable practices that have grown
out of reactions to some very stark realizations of the world we live in have
contributed to this culture of doing it yourself. As a result, we are embracing
imperfections and seeking proof of the human touch in design.
And
I’m particularly encouraged by this possibility: the design field has
historically been dominated by the male gender, but digital visual outlets like
Pinterest and Instagram are dominated by the female gender.
Dot Tip
For anyone who has ever expressed a fear of injury from
falling on a logo with sharp ends, this group has allayed the danger by safety
tipping each pointy offender. There is a nod to science by referencing digital
terminals with these, though that is becoming a pretty dated symbol in a world
that is reliant on more advanced technology.
reference to connect the dot puzzles is more likely. Line
work on these can still become busy and needs to be minimal to keep the message
from becoming too complicated, but it can allude to a pathway or process that
helps link disparate points to achieve an effective end.
Contours
Designers set on finding a hybrid between simple one-color iconic symbols and a more complex descriptive illustrative mark have landed on a solution. A closer evaluation or larger presentation reveals subtle volume delineation that creates a tactile temptation for the consumer.
This is just the amount of visual eye candy necessary to lift
the logo from a page and create a point of optic differentiation. Some
designers might view this technique as a bit to tricky for their liking but
time will prove one group or the other right in the end. Let’s credit the
design direction as moving the conversation forward with solutions that are to
the point and not burdened with unnecessary detail.
Concentrak
Pattern in any definition usually includes repetition of
elements. Seeing just part of a checkerboard is enough for us to assume the
balance of the missing board will also be covered with a continuing checked
pattern. The concentric linear elements of these marks accomplish several
fundamental tasks, including pattern recognition, but also allowing lines to
volumize and fill space. They are at once massive and bold, yet delicate and
fragile.
Bands of lines, often in a loop formation, twist in space to
create a rhythmic story to best represent the client. This dynamic string art
design surged in popularity better than a decade ago but it is seeing a renewed
interest with the acceptance of fine line work in identity design.
Sparkle
A five-pointed star may evoke nationalism to a major part of
the world’s population. That same single star could mean a sub-superior movie
or a superior grade on a class assignment. Scrape the meaning and hit re-start
on an old friend the four-pointed star, or the proverbial icon for “bling.”
Certainly not a new icon, but one that is on a rocketing
resurgence. The four-pointed star is being refitted and reintroduced with a
less divisive host of symbolism. Do note that this same star can be crafted
from four semicircles or from eight flat line segments, and both are relatively
interchangeable without a shift in meaning. The four-point lens flair effect
probably is a more logical representation of a celestial star than a
five-pointed star ever will be.
Pick-Up Sticks
Randomness is an interesting concept that a
definition will tell you lacks pattern or predictability. Though repeatedly
dropping a fist full of pick-up-sticks will never create the same order twice,
it nonetheless will create the same appearance each time. Or in other words a
predictable pattern we will call random. Lines are woven together like so many
fiberglass strands and are equally as strong because of their unpredictability.
Because of the accidental arrangement, it might reflect the patterns
in nature like a woven birds nest or so many pine needles on the floor of a
forest. Man too weaves these patterns with roads and paths, and with air routes
and sea-lanes.
Coloring
It seems only right that as designers focused on
mono-line identity solutions look to suck every last breath from the technique,
they ultimately would circle back to injecting fields of color. After all, a
field of color is the antithesis to the objective of mono-line solutions that
rely only on lines to define their subject. This is a natural progression that
will stunt the creative juices of designer’s children who’d previously been
admonished for NOT coloring outside the lines. They manage to hybrid a relevant
technique with some nostalgic coloring book skills and a smart limited palette.
This is probably the opportunity to discuss trend evolution.
This particular trend of coloring is one more variant and it may be the end of
a line or it could be the nucleus of an entirely new trajectory. Regardless,
designers in the future will look at mono-line logos of any ilk and quickly peg
them as a child of this decade.
Circle
Break
Imagine a pie chart so great that the middle has been
eaten and all you’re left with is a really perfect ring of a crust with the
same remnants of the colored wedges left on the perimeter. The colored band
areas may represent percentiles, or minutes on a clock, or some less orthodox
representation, or they could just provide a decorative effect. The addition of
a layer of significant color is just one more bonus message.
Though some of these marks resemble a rotating ring, such a
ring has become one more iteration of the ubiquitous loading or as many read
it, the “waiting” symbol. This is also a way to introduce some intense color in
such moderation that it avoids becoming a garish chroma spectacle.
Trixelate
Obviously the offspring of what happens when a
triangle and a pixel hook-up. But not just a solid field of homogeneously
consistent triangles. These marks are either equilateral or right triangles,
but not both in a single mark. Almost like peering another layer deep into a
field of pixels and discovering their molecular make-up is actually the
triangle.
These represent entities that understand the story of the
whole being greater than the sum of the parts. Much as a tangram puzzle allows
the player to create images from triangle parts, there is an almost game like
quality to these marks. Note that some use transparency to allow for overlay
while others allow for a general gradient to wash over the full logo.
Photo
Those
ascribing to traditional identity design tenets scrunch up their face and break
into a cold sweat whenever a photographic image is interjected into a logo. In
the past, these images have worked their way into a background, or an icon of a
single image was used as a mark itself. This trend makes this report, as the
last year has been a tipping point for the use of these images fully integrated
into the identity vernacular.
A different generation of designers has unabashedly translated skill sets in
Photoshop into part of their logo design toolkit. These marks are designed with
the same symbolic language we might use in a traditional logo but using photo
imagery instead of a graphic or a sketch. Images lift off the page and are
often blended with other graphic components to complete the mark.
Rays
If it’s an email, we go to all caps, or bold face it,
or underline it, or maybe we even jump protocol and emphasize the drama by
turning it RED with an exclamation point or three!!! Long before those options
were available, the master painters and artisans created an ethereal radiance
behind their subjects to indicate importance or a call for reverence. A
starburst if you will but generally crafted from mono-weight lines.
This year marked a dramatic bloom in the number of marks
incorporating this technique. At a smaller scale the lines tend to soften down
and provide a vector solution that starts to read as a subtle gradation. Look
for designers to investigate how various cultures have dealt with this effect
as this technique is here for a spell.
Naive
Despite referring to these marks as naive they are
about as simple as a fox. There is a renaissance of creating figural logos that
have the spontaneity and whimsy of a child’s drawing with the insight and
subtle design nuances of a mature rendering. It assures us the product or the
owners of the mark are not too full of themselves and likely have a sense of
humor.
The handcrafted approaches on these bask in an attitude of
anti-perfection that bridges to a large dollop of humanity. Practiced designers
will recall Picasso once lamented it took him four years to paint like Raphael,
but a lifetime to paint like a child.
Coded
These
marks are for the theorists that have forever believed identity designers are
craftily inserting conspiratorial or hidden messages in their work. The truer
story is that of many working together as one, demonstrated by a cadre of dots
and dashes marching orderly in parallel lines to achieve a common objective.
Generally these are seen on a single plain with various percentages of mortar
to block combinations, interlocking with the same strength as a brick wall.
Most of these are comprised of elements with rounded or eased tips, though
there are plenty with squared tips to be found as well. For the Fred Hutch
Cancer Research Clinic, Hornall Anderson emphasized the researchers’ work with
a microscope’s window to watch a series of active cells dividing, recombining,
and doing their best impersonation of an initial H.
Chroma
Coaster
Using
a single continuous line to swerve, tip and twist it’s way into a logo is a
time-tested tool for designers. Imagine any of these marks displayed in a solid
color without transparencies and they would hardly capture your attention and
could leave you perplexed. Enter the continuous gradation driven stream of hue
changing color, coursing through their lineal vein, and a trend is born.
A bit like navigating a roller coaster spewing an ever-changing stream of high
chroma plasma in its wake. Color can be transparent, opaque, or with shadows
and highlights to convey a 3-D aspect to the mark. Either way, this vivid
technique makes for a dramatic pop as designers search for ways to incorporate additional
layers of information and brighten their solution.
Detail
A single thin line can be a beautiful thing to
behold, unless it can’t hold it’s own when scaled down. Without resorting to
broad fields of tone, the solution is coming about with repetition and pattern
hewn out of the same stroke weight and frankly multiplied to near excess.
Patterns may not be practical for viewing at smaller scales
but still hold their own weight like the lines of an etching. An homage to a
Persian rug, a vintage label, indigenous textiles, or geometric motion each
help define the skeleton of the marks shown here.
From the consumer’s perspective, the meticulous line work
reflects an attention to detail they may hope to find in the entity it
represents.
Shaded
Shadows and dimensional letterforms from a typographic perspective
give us a chance to demonstrate substance, illicit drama or provide a bit of
campy nostalgia to suggest just a few.
There’s absolutely nothing new about the use of the dimensional shadow, but
designers are embracing the inclusion of this technique in record numbers and
creating them using every conceivable iteration. Whether a single
letter/monogram or a word or phrase, including a decorative return is akin to
knighting a commoner and visually granting the graphic element a dominant role
on a page full of bit players.
On
the flip side (you knew it was coming), the people who are gaining enthusiasm
for design and taking matters into their own hands often aren’t gaining the
talent and learning the skills necessary to create successful designs or move
the industry forward.
These
“design tourists” may be able to find or buy the pre-designed parts and pieces,
even design a few of their own, to create a logo. But they don’t know how they
got to where they are or what it says about their brand, resulting in a lot of
“Monet” designs that look good from a distance but are a bit messy up close.
They can create a pretty picture, but it may have little function beyond
looking pretty, and forget about applying it appropriately and consistently
across multiple applications.
Skilled
designers understand the objective nature of design, not just the subjective
view. Every day, innovators are imagining and developing practical uses for 3-D
printing, and now that it’s becoming more mainstream, there will be an
immediate need for 3-D design, as well as a consistent icon for 3-D printers.
The challenge is that the 3-D icon contenders developed today have a good
chance of appearing dated in very little time, because the device we are using
today will likely look very different in the future.
With
such a wide range of screen sizes on the market, we’re also seeing more
responsive logos and design components. And as the need for versatility
continues to drive design trends, we will see responsive design become an
additive and subtractive process, rather than simply rescaling and rearranging
the components.
Then,
we’ll take those two ideas, throw them together in a blender and make a motion
logo smoothie. A 3-D image, achieved by adding movement to a logo, allows
viewers to see all sides and angles, and allows designers to build more robust
messaging into their designs. And as device-agnostic coding becomes more
customary, the motion logo might automatically take on a new set of gymnastics
when viewed on devices of varying sizes.
Logo
designers have historically taken cues from illustrators, looking for styles
that can migrate into condensed visual solutions. Architects love these and
their quick transition to 3-D applications makes them a favorite of designers
too.
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