1
Debunking 'Green Living': Combatting Climate Change Requires Lifestyle Changes, Not Organic Products
2
A Geodesic Dome Promises Fish from the Sky
3
TED's Taboo: What's Too Controversial for the Hipster Confab?
4
Billr: The App for Dining on a Budget (Without Annoying Your Friends)
5
What Country Has the Best Higher Education System?
1
In a Majority-Minority Nation, Numbers Aren't Everything
2
Facebook Doesn't Need Your Money; Invest in Africa Instead
3
Juilliard Brings Online Music Education to the Masses
4
Sleep Better: 4 Ways to Manipulate Your Melatonin Levels #30DaysofGOOD
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A Place in the Sun: 5 DIY Projects for Summer Lounging
today's top stories from our friends at pitchfork
The Beijing Olympics are still fresh in our memory. There was that flashy opening ceremony. Michael Phelps. That one gymnast girl. Ok, maybe...
Brand Awareness There's no shortage of fauna in the corporate-branding scene: Ponies adorn polo shirts, deer ride along with tractors, jaguars...
If your city had a logo, what would it look like? Well, now you can design one yourself. A project called CitID is collecting logos for cities...
Nearly all of them feature flowing earth goddess-esque figures. Just another case of nonprofits needing to use more design.

The Democrats and the Republicans both got new logos recently. Over at Fast Company, the designer Rick Barrack makes them much better.
Each Super Bowl has a special logo that goes on all the Super Bowl paraphernalia. It goes on $100 million dollars worth of merchandise, in fact....

In countries like Saudi Arabia, Starbucks won't be able to use their new stripped-down logo.

Gap's new logo has offended some people's design taste. What if other logos went the same route?

From the Nike swoosh to the Chiquita banana lady, a tour of what matters in a company's logo.

Logo, tone and presentation: Three steps toward articulating a startup's brand.

Greenpeace flew an "airship" over the Koch Brothers not-so-secret polluters retreat. Unfortunately, their logo spoke louder than anything else.

Starbucks removes the text from their logo and puts the focus on the siren, as the next move in their campaign to "unbrand" themselves to consumers.

