Design Manner

Design Manner

Design Manner featuring great design, architecture, fashion, graphics and innovation from across the globe.

 

Danish Fuel

The speaker of the future is 79 years old and brand new. Developed from a former World War 2 Wehrmacht Einheits Kanister designed by Vinzenz Grunvogel back in 1937. It's purpose was to supply the troops with gasoline, kerosene, gear oil, diesel and water during World War 2. The small can is now collected from land field and restored by sandblasting and new green color. The design is made to be an independent unit. No app, no software needed. No expiration date. The owner will have funky control over the speaker. Sustainable upcycling in Denmark and made to last a lifetime.

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Ancient Village

Lijiang Ancient City is a cultural and tourism treasure with diverse cultural heritage. Through the computer drawing of the ancient city series of illustrations. Creatively inherit and spread the ancient city culture, and bring the traditional cultural heritage into the public view and modern life. The combination of national style illustration and ancient city culture has creativity, nationality and inheritance of the times, which can better convey the natural and cultural heritage to the people of the new era in a new way.

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Bamboo Craft Festival

In response to the sweeping urbanization of Hong Kong and the resulting loss of its cultural diversity, A Bamboo Craft Festival is designed with vast elevated temporary bamboo platforms and structures, creating an urban spatial celebration to preserve and revitalize the local street life cultures, traditions, and craftsmanships. The festival takes place annually and aims to engage the public to experience and explore local street cultures and craftsmanship through workshops and performances, embodying the spirit of Hong Kong.

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Dragonpass

This case is a reshaping of Dragonpass's brand system, with deepened transformation of the brand style, brand VI, and their applications. The addition of brand colors aligns with Dragonpass's strategic inclination for diversified development. By pairing it with visual symbols created based on the brand's original concepts and cultural values, the entire system gains cultural universality and high interactivity, contributing to the overall image upgrade and evolution of the brand.

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Sejong Center Rebranding

The Sejong Center for the Performing Arts is an old public institution that opened in Seoul in 1978. What is special about this identity design is that it tried to break away from the existing logo design of Korean public institutions. These attempts are a new combination of the old and the recent, and Hangul itself serves as a symbol. In particular, the use of Hangul as a logo is appealing to the younger generation as a new retro with boldness that is rarely seen in South Korea. In addition, beyond the logo, it was designed with various senses through typefaces, clothes, and books.

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Evoluwe

Jonathan was inspired by the name and essence of the company Evoluwe to create the branding. In symbology, geometric shapes were used to create a minimalist symbol. The first element, a square, represents the moment when Evoluwe's consultancy understands its client's needs for process improvement. The second element shows a shape that has transformed compared to the first, with one corner already rounded, representing the beginning of the transformation. The final element features the same shape with two rounded corners, symbolizing the evolution of a process within a company.

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