1. Eat your veggies

     

  2. My House

     


  3. Its time to rebrand.

    Recently I’ve been getting a lot of inquires about my design process when it comes to branding and communicating direction to a company. But because I don’t feel super comfortable posting my client’s style guides online, I’ve never been able to document the process on my blog as thoroughly as I’d like.

    Luckily, I’m now the design advisor to an incubator called Kinetiq Labs, so I’ll be doing whatever I want with our internal design assets *hehehe. I’m a huge believer in open data and transparent communication, so being able to write publicly about my design decisions is really refreshing. 

    I recently took on the challenge of rebranding Kinetiq Labs and this is a bit of the thought process behind why and how it all unfolded.

    The original logo on the left was full of problems for us. The gradients made the mark less versatile, the multitude of colors was an obstacle, and the general ‘chrome’ look was way too flashy. 

    The mark on the right is where we’ve arrived as a result of this process.

    The identity direction of Kinetiq revolves around harnessing potential energy to evolve startups. *buzzwords! So basically evolution, science, and creative cycles are huge influencers on our visual identity. 

    Let’s jump in and see how I got there.

    First I started by looking at the elements that we knew for sure we wanted to keep. What’s relevant to our message? How do we rebrand without it coming off as a dramatic overhaul?

    • We knew we wanted to keep the ‘K’. It’s a strong element and has a spark to it that plays along with our mission. 
    • The pitch element is a stronger ‘K’ with a more approachable font family to back it up. 
    • We knew we wanted to keep some rounder elements of the original logo to help express the cyclical nature of evolution.

    Above all else, the new Kinetiq logo needs to express solid foundations and controlled movement. 

    After the general elements and their functions were figured out, I started to reinterpret the system, and how we could infuse motion into the elements.

    This is where the particles came in. By adapting the original ‘K’ into a particle form, we’ve successfully introduced the illusion of motion, or at the very least the illusion of a network (which usually implies motion.)

    The core element is essentially the new Kinetiq ‘K’. Bold and solid, it sets the typography standard for the entire brand. The sexy typeface used here is called Avenir

    The remaining pitch element solves the final piece of the puzzle, cycles.

    Next we move onto the snozzberry filled world of color. 

    When I’m working on identity projects, I always like to start with form in greyscale. When it was time to introduce color to this project I felt the best place to start was with the color spectrum that was being used in the original logo.

    The proposed color palette is a more kickass version of the opposite ends of the original spectrum. I always try to keep things as simple as possible and it’s never fun to be that designer who has to struggle thru complicated gradients and glossy styles that serve very little purpose. These color decisions were based on creating a palette where each new hue that we introduce will be serving a purpose. 

    Here’s how those hot colors play together with the forms.

    Particles & Waves seemed like a great metaphor, I’m all about metaphor. They both embody motion, but particles are lot more mysterious and erratic. The solid color is a great counterpoint for the thin lines and gives us a fallback for situations where the logo may display too small for complicated particles.

    At this step I’ve also introduced the logotype, which is set in sexy ass Avenir. The word Kinetiq stands as the ‘motion’, while Labs serves as the control for the ‘experimental chaos’. 

    This is how they all fit together to form the new Kinetiq Labs identity.

    The mark is strong and the type is approachable without feeling cheap. Many of our core goals are represented here including the focus on experimentation and the evolutionary nature of our incubator model.

    Coincidently, the laboratory notion is also present thanks to the appearance of a ‘blueprint’ style of visuals. Everything that we do is a work in progress and nothing we work on is every really ‘done’.

    We ‘Break It Til We Make It’ and thats sort of the point. Create something rad, find a way to poke holes into it, then improve. Basic evolution. 

    If I have time in the coming weeks, I’ll post up the brand style guide which has detailed direction on things like typography standards, photo treatment, copywriting tone, and bunch of other wacky design nonsense. 

    Though there are many tedious steps in between the ones I’ve shown here, I hope that this gives you some general insight into how I sift thru an identity problem. 

    - -

    On as side note, my recent trip to San Francisco was awesome. And I’ll be heading back in early March to start doing some work. Let’s make some cool shit together and put it out into the world.

     

  4. Something else thats kind of rad. 

     

  5. Kanak* 

    Its been a really long time since I designed something for people to wear. It’s probably been 4 months since Hello/Goodbye/Aloha. I’m proofing this Kanak concept and three other designs with the guys at BGrove today. If this gets printed I’ll be super jazzed. I’ve been working on some other stuff that actually has more than two colors, so we’ll see how that goes.  

    *Cooper Bold is a silly typeface. 

     

  6. I’m back home from San Francisco. I’m posting this photo because I wish I was able to take a vacation, but there’s way too much work to do. 

    While I was extending my stay in SF I had loads of last minute interviews with crazy tech companies (which I’ll write about later). I learned that good people will quickly connect rare talent with other good people. It seemed like decision makers didn’t hesitate clearing their busy schedules to get four or five hours of face time with me before I left town.

    I’m humbled and forever grateful to everyone that reached out to make intros, drink beers, sip coffees, watch foosball, and help me figure this whole thing out. 

    All the follow-ups and offers are starting to roll in, and soon I’m going to have some decisions of my own to make. Maybe I should take a vacation.

    Meanwhile in Hawaii 

    Pow Wow 2013 started this week and we launched a their new website and Kickstarter Campaign for their documentary & coffee table book. You can check it out here

     


  7. San Francisco / Take me to your leader.

    I’m flying from Hawaii to San Francisco in about an hour. It’s super last minute, but good things often are. For as long as I care to remember, SF has been a destination for me that seemed more magical than any other place. We’ve been having a long distance relationship for quite some time.

    As a designer working in Hawaii, things are … interesting. The ecosystem is starting to take shape and the tech community is beginning to mature. Slowly but surely we will have what other major cities proudly refer to as a ‘startup community’.

    Though as an individual, I feel that I’ve personally hit a motivational ceiling. There have been times over the last year that I’ve questioned my place in this community that I love. Almost like I’m desperately seeking some sort of intangible fuel that doesn’t exist. If you know me, you understand that money does not motivate me, amazing offices with eames furniture does not motivate me, ornament, flash, and more cowbell does not motivate me. What motivates me is talent and ideas. 

    Being surrounded by talented people will always inspire you to push each other and to think differently every single day. The plain truth is, the talent pool is very shallow in Hawaii. I’ve always felt that great talent attracts even more great talent, and ever since I quit my shitty job over 2 years ago I’ve run into some of the most talented people that I never knew existed. Working in proximity with these awesome people has been amazing, and being mentioned in conversation alongside their names is the most humbling thing ever. At the time, that was the motivation that I needed to push me through, to get me to where I am now. 

    But the formative years are over. The ecosystem is evolving, the talent pool will be growing, and there’s going to be a paradigm shift. I’m finding myself again, craving the push to think differently. I’m now motivated by becoming great at what I love doing. And I love making products. I believe that if you want to be great at something, you don’t do it by being better than everyone else. You do it by surrounding yourself with greatness, with people that inspire you. Or by eating lots and lots of ice cream. 

    I’ll be looking for a startup in San Francisco that mirrors my perspective.

    I’ll be looking to work with people that not only love what they do, but they love the place where they do it, the reasons behind it, and the users they do it for. Because it’s not about us, its about them. Everything that we do as designers has an effect on something greater than ourselves. Every pixel counts, even in illustrator; because the pixels don’t care who you are, as long as you have intention behind your work. And thats a responsibly that is often taken for granted. But I’m truly in love with the craft, and I’m obsessed with making cool shit.

    I just wrote a love letter to San Francisco.

    And if you happen to know someone who is in the position to help me out, I’d appreciate it if this post somehow crossed their path. 

    If this sounds like something you’d be interested in, ping me at: jon@umi.io

    I’m coming for you San Francisco.

    Take me to your leader.

     

  8. Spent a few weeks working on the North Shore. 

     


  9. Starting yesterday I’ll be working remotely from the north shore of Oahu for a week.

    I’ll explain later. Right now I’m working. 

    (Source: umi)

     

  10. Me & My Handywork

     

  11. Putting in work at HQ.

    Check out my splatter stance.

     

  12. HNL 

    A quick exploration, using google map’s satellite view. I might do more of these at more zoomed in levels for different neighborhoods. Not sure what I’ll use them for tho. 

    The type treatment is from a project I just recently completed for Hawaii Cocktail Week.

     

  13. from up above

     

  14. S K Y F A L L - November 10 - At The Manifest 

     

  15. S K Y F A L L - This is happening. Very Soon.