Multicolor Multicore: A new identity for a micromedia brand
Multicore logo lockup with "Multicore" written in Japanese katakana characters

Multicolor Multicore: A new identity for a micromedia brand

Sam Byford is, like me,?an ex-pat Brit who unlike me, lives in Tokyo, Japan. We also share a common background:?we both love gadgets, and both?used to work at?The Verge.?Today, Sam, like a growing number of entrepreneurial journalists, writes for his own publication,?Multicore, which he publishes on Substack. It’s about technology, hardware, and design. It’s very good, and you should read it and subscribe.

I am fascinated by the rise of micromedia brands like Multicore, where individual writers, journalists, artists, designers, and creators are building their own brands using commonly available platforms like?Substack,?Medium, and?Ghost. In fact, I am creating something along these lines myself:?MBH4H, Made by Humans for Humans—but that’s for another time. Now, back to Multicore.

A few months ago, I asked Sam?to help translate?some taglines into Japanese. Translating English to Japanese is not easy, at least not easy to do well. There's often nuance and meaning that doesn't translate directly; it takes work and a deep understanding of the language. After Sam did such a thorough job for me, it only seemed fair that I worked on a new brand identity for Multicore?in return.

The inspiration comes from everything from multi-core processors to video game graphics and the?Tokyo subway map. The result is a complex full-color logo that will work equally well on both light and dark backgrounds and a simplified single-color version designed to work as a watermark and may even be on a T-shirt—who doesn’t love merch?

The wordmark uses arguably my favorite font in the world: Neue Haas Grotesk Display Proof. But of course, I think the?logo looks best with?Multicore?written in Japanese katakana characters.

Welcome to the new Multicore brand.

Single-color Logo
Single-color Logo (reversed)
Multicore wordmark. Font: Neue Haas Grotesk Display Pro?/ Japanese katakana characters.
Logo lockup on light gray #F1f1f1 (used as the background color on the Multicore publication on Substack


Rick Lowe

Executive Creative Director, Founder and Brand Builder at ricklowedesign (RLD)

9 个月

Nice work JB!

Andy Paterson-Jones

Co-Founder of FilmDuo - Creative Content Producer for Ambitious Investment Growth Opportunities | Bristol, UK | Investor Storytelling | Series A Growth Expert

10 个月

Nifty work Mr B.

Liz Kelly Nelson

News Strategy, Creator Journalism & Media Consumption

10 个月

Sooooo great!

Shiva Kumar

Actor, Author, Filmmaker

10 个月

Nice job James! Sort of retro, 3D and digital.

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