The company made a major change
to its logo Tuesday. It's keeping the same color scheme (but brightening it)
and switching to an entirely new typeface. The custom typeface is now
sans-serif and thicker. It's the same typeface that Google's (GOOG)
new parent company Alphabet is using for its logo.
The makeover has a practical motivation. This kind of lettering is easier to
read when shrunk down, as Google products increasingly are on mobile devices
and wearables.
The new branding replaces the last Google logo, which the company has used
since September 2013.
"We've taken the Google logo and branding,
which were originally built for a single desktop browser page, and updated them
for a world of seamless computing across an endless number of devices,"
said Google's Tamar Yehoshua and Bobby Nath in a blog post announcing the
change..
In addition to the new static logo, Google created an animated set
of four dots that show up when a Google product is processing. Google
also unveiled a new multicolored "G" logo for places where the whole
company name won't fit.
The logo was created earlier this year
during a one-week collaboration between various Google designers. They
wanted to create a smaller version of the Google logo for tiny screens,
add some movement and have a consistent look across Google products,
according to a detailed post about the redesign.
"The Google logo has always had a simple, friendly and approachable
style. We wanted to retain these qualities by combining the mathematical
purity of geometric forms with the childlike simplicity of schoolbook
letter printing," said the post.
Google should brace itself for strong reactions. Many big companies have struggled with rebrandings. Gap (GPS), Coke (CCE) and Hershey (HSY) are just a few of the brands that switched back to their classic logos after negative receptions.
"It's just a disaster," said Ina Saltz, a typography expert and
professor at CCNY. "It looks childish, it looks unsophisticated, it
looks like play dough."
Saltz says the spacing between the
lowercase "g" and "l" is too tight, the bottom "jaw" of the upper case G
sticks out too far, and there's a dissonance between the angle of the
lower case "e" and the first "G." Instead of switching typefaces
completely, Saltz said Google would have been better off beefing up the
existing logo to work better on small screens while keeping its overall
look.
"You have a built up recognizability and a constituency
that recognizes your distinctive logo," she said. "This has nothing
distinctive about it."
This is Google's sixth logo
since the company launched in 1998. Most of the updates have been
subtle. Over the past 17 years, Google has made only two drastic changes
to its official branding.
In October 1998, Google change the
color of the "G" from green to blue and added an exclamation point at
the end. Google removed the exclamation point the following May.
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