I am not sure how many of you have noticed a hidden symbol in the Federal Express logo:
Yeah, I am talking about the 'arrow' that you can see between the E and the x in this logo. The arrow was introduced to underscore speed and precision, which are part of the positioning of the company.
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The above logo is for an editing studio. I like the way the logo attempts to convey what they do.
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The above are two magazines from the Readers Digest stable. Again, the attempt to communicate what it is about quite figuratively through the logo catches my attention.
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I liked this logo of a hair stylist for the cheeky humour it brings to the (dressing) table.
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This logo is too good. For the name Eight, they have used a font in which each letter is a minor adaptation of the number 8.
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Eighty-20 is a small consulting company which does sophisticated financial modeling, as well as some solid database work. All their work is highly quantitative and relies on some serious computational power, and the logo is meant to convey it.
People first guess that 20% of the squares are darkened, but that turns out to be false after counting them. The trick is to view the dark squares as 1's and the light squares as 0's. Then the top line reads 1010000 and the bottom line reads 0010100, which represent 80 and 20 in binary.
Kinda like the surreal green screen of The Matrix, they want us to read stuff in binary
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This was a logo designed in-house for some internal event at IBM. I like that they are quite relaxed about the logo, unlike certain other companies who do not like the logo to be tampered with in any way even for internal promotions.
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You might think the arrow does nothing here. But it says that amazon.com has everything from a to z and it also represents the smile brought to the customer's face. Wow, that is quite deep.
I cud'nt include few more i had like Cluenatic and Sun... but may be you know bout them..



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Semantically, the name Wipro does not mean anything. When we started work for Wipro in 1996 we found that every division was a different company in spirit and there was no linking concept that bonded the divisions, no branding coherency across businesses. Each division had its own separate mission, and neither Wipro as a corporation nor its identity was aspirational.

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