
Articles
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2 weeks ago |
creativebloq.com | Daniel John
Earlier this month, UK newspaper The Guardian launched a major refresh of its mobile app alongside a redesigned homepage. In order to deliver a more engaging, personalised and seamless digital experience for readers, the team created a new homepage for both the app and website that's designed to be less overwhelming and more curated. The new Guardian app features a redesigned and streamlined My Guardian tab, a dedicated Audio tab, and more puzzles.
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3 weeks ago |
creativebloq.com | Daniel John
We all remember where we were when we found out the Apple logo had been urinated on by the Android robot. Well, actually, this breaking news passed me ten years ago, so I don't. But I'm sure it's seared indelibly onto the minds, nay, souls, of all who bore witness to the saga in April 2015. Yes, it's been a decade since the Apple was defiled by the robot on Google Maps, with an era of terrain in Pakistan edited to depict, quite clearly, the robot relieving itself onto the poor, defenceless fruit.
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3 weeks ago |
creativebloq.com | Daniel John
Of all the books crying out to be turned into a design-first coffee-table book complete with oversized sans serifs and an abundance of negative space, I wouldn't have place the Bible top of the list. But now that I've laid eyes upon Byble (yes, it even has a new, trendy name), I'm almost tempted to clear a scared space on my coffee table. Dylan Da Silva has created a redesigned version of the Bible that can truly be described as a design object.
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3 weeks ago |
creativebloq.com | Daniel John
Last year we saw plenty of splashy rebrands drop, perhaps most notably the controversial new look for Jaguar. Rather than simply introducing a new logo, it brought an entirely new aesthetic to the brand – and for a day or two back there it was all anybody could talk about. But so far in 2025, the best rebrands have been an altogether quieter affair. We've seen new identities arrive for the likes of Adobe and Amazon – although at a glance, you might not know it.
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3 weeks ago |
creativebloq.com | Daniel John
There must be something in the water in Silicon Valley. Several big tech and digital brands including Amazon and Adobe have revealed subtle tweaks to their logos this month, and now Google has dropped the first significant update to its logo in a decade. This one, however, is a little more noticeable. Perhaps signalling the final death-knell for the harsh geometry of the flat design movement, Google has blurred the four colours of its 'G' logo into a rainbow gradient.
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