Showing posts with label education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label education. Show all posts

Thursday, October 6, 2011

New logo: Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines University


The Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines University (Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines in French, abbreviated UVSQ) is a university with 18,000 students located in Versailles, about 20 kilometres from the French capital. Last week, on September 29, it launched a new visual identity, created by Dragon Rouge.

Previous logo.

The previous logo was hard to read and not really suited for web use, which had lead to the use of a separate logo for the web.

The new look introduces heraldry to the twenty-year-old university through the use of a coat of arms, with a sun representing radiating knowledge. The two colours are carried over from the previous logo, with blue symbolising knowledge and research, and green representing sustainable development, among other things.

The new logo for this young university exploits several Western university clichés. Not only does it introduce a new coat of arms, the name is written with Trajan and Gotham. Trajan is something of a default typeface for academia, and some designers would consider the use of Trajan in university logos uninspired and generic. At the same time, this solution avoids the "other" trend in modern university logos, which is to create something based on the university's initials, a common approach in France today.

There is also a compact version of the logo where the logo-type has been included in the coat of arms. The sun-ray motif is also used as a background for various publication templates.
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Friday, September 23, 2011

New logo: Royal Conservatoire of Scotland


On September 1, the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama (RSAMD) officially changed its name to the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland, a change with years in the making. The visual identity was created by the Stand in Glasgow who won the assignment in a four-way pitch. It is centered on a mark where bars make up the initials of the institution, signifying its diversity and representing its disciplines. The typeface for the logo-type was costum-made.

Previous logo.

The previous logo, a nice mix of typefaces, was introduced a few years. It replaced another, more colourful, logo introduced about a decade ago.
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Friday, August 26, 2011

New logo: Intrax


Intrax, a company that provides global educational programs, like foreign exchange students, au pairs and language education, has introduced a new corporate identity. It was created by MetaDesign in San Francisco.




Previous logo.
From a press release sent out by MetaDesign:
"MetaDesign worked with the executive team and leadership of marketing and sales to develop the essence of the Intrax brand, architecture of the brand portfolio and a new visual identity system representing the concept of "connections".

The logo features a customized typeface with distinct inflections that demonstrate ‘connections’. The most prominent feature of the logo is the letter “x,” from which an arrow shape has been derived and assigned a complementary color. This arrow symbolizes the personal and professional direction, as well as the forward-looking outlook, that Intrax program participants gain.

A highly systemic and versatile design system was developed in conjunction with the logo. An angular graphic device reiterates the concept of connections and direction, giving the brand a dynamic and compelling visual language."
Two of the programs offered by Intrax (Ayusa and AupairCare) have visual identities that match Intrax, and they have maintained that link.
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Monday, August 22, 2011

New logo: University of San Francisco


Last Friday, August 19, the University of San Francisco (USF) unveiled its new visual identity, along with a new tagline, "Change the World From Here".

The overhauled identity was created by San Francisco design agency Studio Hinrichs and USF's Dale Johnston, and was developed over eighteen months.




Previous logo.

The previous logo, dubbed the "cross USF logo", was allegedly introduced in 1994 and designed by Landor Associates. It contained a "budded cross" and the initials in a green rectangle.

Three-letter acronyms are generic and confusing, and most of the new logos only use the university's full name, to enforce the university's own identity and its connection to the city where it is located.




The symbol on its own.

USF is a Jesuit Catholic university, and like its predecessors, the new logo includes a cross, although it is now less on-the-nose, and has been hidden in a symbol made up of arrows. They point both inward and outward "reflecting the ongoing dialogue and engagement between the university and society".

As is costumary with university identies there are dozens of lockups of text and symbol for different uses. The logo on the top of this page is the main version, a few others are presented below.
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Monday, August 1, 2011

New logo: Northern Illinois University


Last week, on July 26, Northern Illinois University unveiled a new university logo which will be used with its tagline, "Learning Today, Leading Tomorrow", selected last year.

The creation process took place during the spring semester and started by allowing graphic artists across campus to submit their suggestions. Joe Bosack Graphic Design Co. of Pennsylvania were also involved in the design process. The submissions were then narrowed down to two before the final version was selected, with influence from polling and focus groups.

This new logo is not exactly groundbreaking when compared to other modern American university logos. As the NIU vice president for university relation Kathy Buettner told the university community portal NIU Today: "Our new logo was not just an exercise in creativity, nor was it created in a vacuum".

The building seen in the mark is the tower of Altgeld Hall, the landmark building on the NIU campus. The typeface in the wordmark is Lucida Bright Demi. As is costumary with these kinds of university identities, there are several different horizontal and vertical lock-ups of the icon and the wordmark.

Previous logo.

Previously, NIU primarily used different versions of a wordmark in the school colours.

The logo is scheduled for launch on the NIU homepage on August 15. One year later, all university units will be required to use it exclusively.
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Thursday, May 26, 2011

New logo: KMH - Swedish Royal College of Music


The Royal College of Music, or Kungliga musikhögskolan (KMH), is one of the leading music education institutions in Sweden. On May 5, KMH presented a new visual identity. It was created by Stockholm Design Lab (SDL), who were was selected from seven agencies.

Previous logo.

The previous identity was developed in 1998. Since then, the college has gone through many changes, and it is also planning for a new building. A need to better communicate the institutions core values and specificity to both domestic and international receivers was identified. Furthermore, the previous identity was mostly developed with print in mind, and was limiting when used for digital applications.

From now on, communication will put emphasis on the abbreviation KMH. Unlike the full names, it works in many languages. The visual identity intends to be both formal and playful, and to express creativity and openness.

If you know and admire SDL's other work, you should not be disappointed. It follows a familar Scandinavian design philosophy that is unique to this agency.
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Monday, May 16, 2011

New logo: University of Maryland, Baltimore and University of Maryland Medical Center


On May 12, the University of Maryland, Baltimore (UMB) and the University of Maryland Medical Center (UMMC) revealed a new visual identity which unfies two institutions that previously had separate identities. UMB is a professional university, founded in 1807, while UMMC is a teaching hospital, which tracks its roots to a few decades later. Both instituions are located in Baltimore, Maryland. Although they are legally separate, they collaborate and have similar goals.

This new look replaces a cluttered image with a bunch of different independent logos that have been used by UMMC and UMB and its schools.

The new symbol is based on Davidge Hall, a building at the UMB/UMMC campus built almost 200 years ago with a dome and a portico. The portico, with a reduced number of columns, is clearly visible, while the dome can be seen in a more subtle arch.

The typefaces used are Trajan Pro for everything but the "of" part, which is Times New Roman Italic. Both are obvious and common typeface choices for university logos.

Previous UMB logo.

The previous UMB seal included elements from from the Maryland state seal and flag. They have been abandoned, but the yellow-red-black-white colour scheme is still present. Many other universities in Maryland base their logos on the state seal, so this helps distinguish UMB from them.

A previous UMMC logo (one of several, I haven't been able to track down which was the "main" version).

The UMMC logo contained a more literal representation of Davidge Hall.

The new look was launched on May 12, and will be phased in during the rest of the year, with a deadline set for January 1, 2012.
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Tuesday, May 3, 2011

New logo: Ural Federal University


Ural Federal University (UrFU) is a university in Yekaterinburg, the fourth most populated city in Russia. The university was formed recently by combing the two existing universities in Yekaterinburg, the Ural State Technical University (USTU) and the classical Ural State University (USU).

The visual identity for the new university was unveiled on April 7. It has been created by the Yekaterinburg agency RA Voshod (written РА Восход with cyrillic letters, meaning "Sunrise" in Russian), who won the assignment last December.

Voshod's creative director Vladislav Derevyannyh attended the unveiling of the new look and has provided a detailed explanation of the process which lead to the creation of the logo and the rest of the visual identity. Much of this article is a summary of his explanation.

The process involved going through nearly a hundred different university logos form Russia and around the world, identifying common themes and rejecting many of them for the project. So it was decided that the new logo wouldn't be a landmark, it wouldn't use illustrative images (hands, trees, globes, pens) and it wouldn't mimic a stamp. Furthermore, heraldic solutions were abandoned, as the team saw it more fitting with unversities who had a century-old tradition.

What had been present in the logos of the two preceeding universities was porticos (a number of columns with a roof structure). The USTU logo used eight columns, the USU logo used four. It's not totally clear to me, but the main problem with using the colonnade in the new identity seems have been the number of columns.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

The team then looked at the name of the new university and the two that preceeded it, as well as their abbreviations and a lot of buzzwords such as "study", "mind", "unique", "universal", "success" and "aspiration", finding that the Russian letter U (У) was present in all of them. A number of different U's were tried out before settling for the final version.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic
Different text lock-ups.

The U symbol can be used on its own, but can also be locked-up with the abbreviation and the full name of the university, which happens to be Уральский федеральный университет имени первого Президента России Б.Н.Ельцина (which is Russian for "Ural Federal University named after Russia's first president B. N. Yeltsin").

There is no single colour for the logo, instead it uses a bunch of colourful gradients. One can also clip different images into it.

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Wednesday, April 20, 2011

New logo: University of Erlangen-Nuremberg


The University of Erlangen-Nuremberg is a university in Erlangen and Nuremberg in Bavaria, Germany, founded in the 18th century. Its German name is Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, and its is named after the founder and one a strong supporter. Those two men can also be seen in the university's seal.

The university recently revealed a new visual identity, with a press release issued April 5. The new identity is centered on the initals FAU, until now used internally at the university. The three letters have then been divided into ten lines, à la IBM, and an interesting ligature has been created between the F and the A.

The rebrand is credited to a Munich agency called Büro für Gestaltung Wangler & Abele.

The main colour is dark blue, but there are also logos for each of the five faculties where the two lines in the middle  of the logomark have been coloured with a faculty colour. The faculties previously had their own logos that weren't related to the main university logo, so the rebrand brings some uniformity in university communcation.

The previous logo consisted of the name in full with a seal and some boxes and lines. It was reportedly introduced fifteen years ago. The seal will remain in use, for example as a watermark on stationery.

Previous logo

The main logo with faculty logos.

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg 1
University of Erlangen-Nuremberg 2
University of Erlangen-Nuremberg 3
Design Tagebuch
nordbayern.de
1

Thursday, February 24, 2011

New logo: Université Blaise Pascal

Blaise Pascal University (Université Blaise-Pascal or Clermont-Ferrand II) is a university in Clermont-Ferrand in the middle of France. They started the year by launching a new visual identity.

The university was named after 17th century mathematician, scientist, and philosopher Blaise Pascal. A light blue version of his profile was at the center of the old logo, introduced some time during the last decade.

The new logo is centered on the university's abbreviation, UBP. The letters are simplified, and the B is formed from the whitespace between the other letters. The profile of Pascal is still present in the new logo, but has been turned into a silhouette and now acts as one of the counters in the B. The entire logo is shown at an angle, with the full name written above the initials, and the V in université turned on its side for some reason.
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Tuesday, February 15, 2011

New logo: Charles Sturt University


Charles Sturt University is a multi-campus university located in Australia, named after 19th century explorer Charles Sturt. They launched a new logo on Monday February 14, 2011. The new logo is a stylised version of the Swainsona formosa, or Sturt's Desert Pea, a flower available in the area. The Sturt's Desert Pea was also in the old logo, but was then part of a shield design.

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