Product Details
LogoLounge: 2,000 International Identities by Leading Designers

LogoLounge: 2,000 International Identities by Leading Designers
By Bill Gardner, Catharine Fishel

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Product Description

This book takes all the logos that were in Rockport Publisher's best-seller, LogoLounge and collects them in one small, neat, pictorial handbook for easy reference.

There are no lengthy case histories, just logos, logos, and more logos. It's a fast-paced book featuring one to six logos per page to allow designers to easily shop for ideas. Logos are among the most important elements a designer can create, so it is no surprise that they are always looking for new, fresh ideas. LogoLounge delivers just that. Its predecessor showcased the logos along with the stories of how they came to be; this compact version puts the spotlight on the logos alone, making it the perfect handbook to logo design.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #230948 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-02-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 356 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Bill Gardner is president of Gardner Design and has produced work for Learjet, Thermos, Nissan, Pepsi, Pizza Hut, and the 2004 Athens Olympics. His work has been featured in the Museum of Modern Art and many other national and international design exhibitions. He lives in Wichita, Kansas.


Catharine Fishel runs Catharine & Sons, a full-service editorial company that specializes in working with designers and related industries. Editor of Dynamic Graphics magazine, she frequently writes for Step-by-Step Graphics, PRINT, DesignNet, and other trade publications. She is the author of Paper Graphics, Minimal Graphics, Redesigning Identity, The Perfect Package, and Designing for Children, and co-author of Logolounge.


Customer Reviews

Excellent On All Counts.5
If you buy one logo book this year, I would recommend that this be it. There is no padding at all in the packaging. Succinct and on-target profiles of identity projects intersperse what you came for: the marks. --And there is a glorious superabundance of those.

For advertising agencies that do a fair amount of trade with client intermediaries who are in the dark about "what is out there" (i.e. people who make decisions about logos with little knowledge about what the good and above-typical work being done today looks and feels like) this book might make the all-time great leave-behind. (This would be putting your "educating the client" money where your mouth is.)

For designers working in a frankly commercial setting, the book can be viewed as a compass or gauge of sorts: This is where 'they' are; this is where 'you' are. As such, it is a truly invaluable aid and guide. But maybe more importantly, the work is often so exhilarating to look at that it would be hard not to feel recharged and ready to tear into your next identity project after browsing it.

This book is a direct outgrowth of a website dedicated to logo design. The authors suggest that this may be the first of a series of annuals from the same resource. Let's hope so.

Good - but hard to 'read'!4
Excellent collection of logos organized by subject, ie: buildings, letterforms, text, etc

However, it lacks any real information on the actual companies these logos were made for. Names are rarely descriptive enough.
I guess this book is more about cramming logos in than describing the process - so I forgave this one.

What I won't forgive is the incredibly confusing 'design' of the information grid at the bottom of each page telling you which logo belongs to who.
It is incredibly confusing.
It's badly designed.
It's a shame to see bad design in a DESIGN book.
simple numbers would have done instead of the Row A, column 3 grid system they used. It's needlessly complex.

Regardless, it's quantity and quality over that nitpick.
A lot of good logos. Very little filler.
Surprising, given the hit and miss of a lot of similar books.

Oh, so close to 5 stars...4
As far as books on logos go I would easily put this book on the top of the list. The number of logos in the book, the straight forward layout, and the way they are organized into categories is wonderfully functional. I also like the fact that the authors don't have the audacity to title their book along the lines of "The Best of Logo Designs" as other "Best of" books have done (which usually aren't anywhere near "The Best"). There are only 3 gripes I have with the book, one major, two minor.

The minor gripes are: 1. I would like to see a wider range of designers and design firms represented, and 2. The binding isn't of the highest quality.

The major gripe, and the reason I didn't give the book 5 stars is the exceptionally user UNfriendly logo index at the bottom of each page. As designers, they could have done better here. But if that's the only thing keeping you from enjoying this book as a visual smorgasborg, idea generator and reference tool, maybe you should stick to paint by numbers.