December 9th, 2012

No one is ever going to confuse me with a graphic designer, even in very dim light. But starting with Mike’s suggestion of a Fresnel pattern to pun on “Let There Be Light” and switching to a Moire, I came up with this. No, it doesn’t say “University of California.” It doesn’t have to, because we’re the farking University of California, and if we make this our logo people will recognize it.
 

  LET THERE BE LIGHT

                   1868

Of course anyone with superior skills and tools – that is to say, nearly anyone – could easily do better. This thing is too dark and too contrasty. But I claim that this does, as the other thing does not, look as if it might be the logo of someplace whose logo you’d care about.

23 Responses to “A second cut at a new UC logo”

  1. Ferd says:

    An androgynous, brainiac surfer, reading a book while hanging ten inside a perfectly curling “C” wave, man.

    There’s gotta be a surfer inside the “C”!

  2. Anonymous37 says:

    And if you scroll up and down, the sides shimmer! Nice!

  3. Michael O'Hare says:

    Crop a third off all four sides and render it in campus colors, and I think this has legs

    • Mark Kleiman says:

      Why crop it? I’m not disagreeing, just asking.

      Do we really want this in color rather than what seems to me the more elegant b&w, which is also easily adaptable across media and cheap to make letterhead out of?

      A volunteer to work on this?

  4. NCG says:

    Sorry, no. It gives me a headache just to look at it. I don’t care what it is.

  5. daksya says:

    Good luck getting this accepted for inclusion in moving pictures.

  6. Mrs Tilton says:

    I think I saw that poster on a collectibles site. From the Fillmore, right? Let There Be Light were opening for Moby Grape, as I recall.

  7. Freeman says:

    Has Mark been experimenting with hallucinogenics?

  8. Ebenezer Scrooge says:

    The perfect logo for UC Santa Cruz!

  9. Katja says:

    On second thought, the new logo may not be THAT bad. :)

  10. Maybe you could do something with a pretty matrix barcode, the meaning being “University of California – fiat lux, donations gratefully received”.

    • Andrew Sabl says:

      James, you’re mistaken: the new unofficial slogan of UC is not “donations gratefully received” (we tried that already) but “let there be light–customized to corporate specifications on request.” But a matrix barcode is certainly an apt symbol for the latter as well.

    • Altoid says:

      Not just any matrix barcode, but QR code with auto donation forwarding. It’s about the right shape, it’s modern and forward-looking, it’s social-media friendly, cheap to reproduce in all media, everybody knows what it is. And it’s highly symbolic.

      • Warren Terra says:

        I suppose it stands to reason some QR codes will look like recognizable objects and letters (or they will if you stare at them long enough, or if you stare into yourself long enough). I wonder if there’s a special mechanism to get assigned one of those.

        • Come on, geek readers! The actual message only takes up a small portion of the Aztec matrix. The rest you can fill with black-or-white bits that don´t have a barcode meaning but create your pretty Californian pattern. Even the hagfish upload icon if you insist.

          • Warren Terra says:

            Speaking of the “hagfish upload icon” – don’t miss the animated GIF made from it that Justin linked (and possibly he made?) in a comment to the previous thread.

            Also, RE QR codes: what are the rules about overlaying a black-and-white QR code over another color? I bet you could make the code still work fairly well using yellow or a light shade of grey, while achieving an artistic effect.

            On the other hand, QR codes probably aren’t necessary. Google Goggles or similar competing products should be able to identify any prominent logo.

          • The hagfish has eaten a speed overdose.

  11. Byomtov says:

    That’s a moire!!

  12. [...] my first attempt at a new UC logo played to distinctly mixed reviews; some people thought I’d been doing a little bit of drug [...]


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