Page 177 of 237
Re: Another High Street Rebrand
Posted: Mon 15 Jan, 2018 13.11
by Philip
There may be a slight issue with the positioning of the masthead…
https://twitter.com/fast_philosophy/sta ... 2340209664
Re: Another High Street Rebrand
Posted: Tue 16 Jan, 2018 15.25
by sqwidge1978
Wouldn't the Old Masthead have had a similar issue as that was Justified on the right
Re: Another High Street Rebrand
Posted: Tue 16 Jan, 2018 15.42
by Philip
sqwidge1978 wrote: Tue 16 Jan, 2018 15.25
Wouldn't the Old Masthead have had a similar issue as that was Justified on the right
But as the paper was larger it would have been folded on its side.
Re: Another High Street Rebrand
Posted: Tue 16 Jan, 2018 17.48
by tillyoshea
Philip wrote: Tue 16 Jan, 2018 15.42
sqwidge1978 wrote: Tue 16 Jan, 2018 15.25
Wouldn't the Old Masthead have had a similar issue as that was Justified on the right
But as the paper was larger it would have been folded on its side.
True - but the FT in the tweet above is folded in half and still orientated so as to obscure the masthead - which rather suggests that the newsagent doesn't think masthead visibility affects sales.
Re: Another High Street Rebrand
Posted: Tue 16 Jan, 2018 22.51
by Alexia
tillyoshea wrote: Tue 16 Jan, 2018 17.48
True - but the FT in the tweet above is folded in half and still orientated so as to obscure the masthead - which rather suggests that the newsagent doesn't think masthead visibility affects sales.
The newsagent in that tweet is a fool for putting a paper on his shelf fold-side-underneath.
Also the FT is distinctive due to its pinkness. Perhaps the Guardian should print on paper that's a delightfully neutral shade of taupe, darlings.
Re: Another High Street Rebrand
Posted: Sun 28 Jan, 2018 14.45
by Alexia
Pub developers have, ahem "refreshed" the ancient and storied Rummer Tavern in Cardiff including brand new sign frontage and a much-derided interior.
See if you can spot the mistake with the new signs. (New left, old right)

Re: Another High Street Rebrand
Posted: Sun 28 Jan, 2018 20.27
by WillPS
Ancient Sky Sports logo?
Re: Another High Street Rebrand
Posted: Sun 28 Jan, 2018 21.39
by Alexia
I guess it's "period-specific".
Still more modern than this one, which was just taken down only last summer.
https://goo.gl/maps/hFmDcyzau9m
Re: Another High Street Rebrand
Posted: Mon 29 Jan, 2018 14.31
by JAS84
Along with the main sign, so I'm guessing the Sky Sports sign was only taken down because that bowling alley closed down?
Re: Another High Street Rebrand
Posted: Fri 09 Feb, 2018 15.49
by Jonny
For those hitherto unfamiliar with the layout of the MetroCentre, Gateshead, one of its defining features is its colour-coded mall system (Red, Green, Blue, Yellow), as featured in the centre's original logo.
For reasons of corporate design insistency, the interior navigational signage, previously decked out in those easily identifiable signature colours (allowing you to quickly get your bearings in such a massive space) has recently been replaced with incredibly dour, universally black and orange Intu boards.
The mall name (eg "Green Mall") has been demoted to a tiny footnote in the bottom corner of the board, always in black on orange.
I've tolerated the inane tweeness of the Intu brand (particularly its grating attempt at an informal tone of voice) but this is just really terrible design putting bland corporate consistency before helpful function.
Re: Another High Street Rebrand
Posted: Fri 09 Feb, 2018 20.09
by Alexia
Jonny wrote: Fri 09 Feb, 2018 15.49
I've tolerated the inane tweeness of the Intu brand (particularly its grating attempt at an informal tone of voice) but this is just really terrible design putting bland corporate consistency before helpful function.
Not just Intu doing this in my experience. A lot of corporations - most notably the railway - are very insistent on their corporate style, however flowery and "chic", being first and foremost the priority over any semblance of usefulness. I hope West Midlands Railway dispose of London Midland's wafer-thin white-on-black station signage sooner rather than later.