Logos and Identities

Collection of logo and identity designs by Keith Bloom including CubeSmart, Chronology Productions, Vélocity Bicycle Co-op, Georgetown Partnership, Hist1H1e Foundation, Cavalier Telephone, screen47, and The Third Way Foundation

Identity design is where my instincts are most exposed. There is nowhere to hide in a logo — every decision about form, weight, letter spacing, and concept is either right or it isn’t. The marks collected here span three decades, eight organizations, and a range of briefs as different from one another as their sectors. What connects them is a consistent design philosophy: type-driven, conceptually grounded, and built to work as hard as the organizations they represent.

CubeSmart is the flagship engagement in this collection and one of the most visible pieces of work in my portfolio. Commissioned for a complete rebrand of the national self-storage company, the assignment began with the wordmark — custom-drawn letterforms with proprietary glyph modifications that give the mark its distinctive character and ensure it reads as a composed, unified whole rather than a typeface applied. The cubic icon above the wordmark is deceptively simple — a three-dimensional form that communicates storage, structure, and spatial intelligence in a single gesture. The engagement extended well beyond the mark itself into a comprehensive graphic standards manual covering architectural signage, building facade treatments, interactive advertising templates, and employee uniforms — the full spectrum of environmental and brand identity practice delivered as a single coherent system. CubeSmart remains in active national use today.

Chronology Productions — founded by Academy Award-nominated screenwriter Eric Heisserer — called for a mark that could live in a credit reel as naturally as on a business card. The solution draws from the Orloj, the historic astronomical clock in Prague’s Old Town Square, adapting its intricate medieval clockwork geometry into the letter O at the center of the wordmark. Set in elegant spaced capitals with a warm gold palette, the mark feels simultaneously cinematic and timeless — and was conceived from the outset for animation, the clockwork mechanism designed to turn.

Hist1H1e Foundation is the most personal mark in this collection. Created pro bono for a lifelong friend and his wife, the identity supports a worldwide community of parents, physicians, and researchers united around a rare pediatric genetic disorder. The wordmark encodes the syndrome’s clinical name directly — Hist1H1e — with the double helix of a DNA strand completing the final letterform. It is a mark designed to make something invisible visible, and to give a scattered global community a recognizable emblem to gather around.

Vélocity Bicycle Co-op is a passion project and an ongoing one — I currently serve on the board of directors of this Washington, DC-area 501(c)(3) and am the organization’s visual identity steward. The refresh standardized and refined the custom workmark letterforms, and added structural detail and historical depth to the winged wheel mark — an homage to the Campagnolo winged quick-release wheel composition patented in the 1930s, one of the most iconic artifacts in cycling design history. The accent on the é is deliberate, a nod to the French cycling tradition from which so much of the sport’s visual language descends.

screen47.com was a concept ahead of its moment — a user-generated streaming video platform designed in a Netscape 2.0 environment, before YouTube existed or broadband made such a thing commercially viable. The name encodes a quiet piece of chemistry: 47 is the atomic number of silver, a reference to the silver screen. The mark uses an orbital ring system around the numeral, suggesting both planetary motion and the then-nascent concept of content in orbit around a digital hub.

Georgetown Partnership represents the business and civic interests of one of Washington’s most historically distinct neighborhoods. The mark draws its central image from the golden dome and cupola of the Farmers and Mechanics Bank at Wisconsin and M Streets NW — one of Georgetown’s most recognizable architectural landmarks — rendered in a warm gold that references the building’s gilded presence at that corner. The mark speaks directly to the audiences the Partnership engages: city and federal officials who understand immediately that this organization speaks for a neighborhood with real historical standing.

Cavalier Telephone entered the Mid-Atlantic telecommunications market as a competitive carrier in the post-AT&T deregulation landscape, serving neighborhoods underserved by the incumbent Bell companies. The identity needed to project infrastructure credibility and competitive energy simultaneously — the bold italic wordmark with its sweeping red speed stroke achieves both, suggesting momentum without sacrificing the solidity a telephone carrier requires. The engagement extended into award-winning broadcast animation and direct mail campaigns that earned ADDY Gold and Summit Creative Silver recognition.

The Third Way Foundation emerged from the centrist political tradition of the Democratic Leadership Council and Progressive Policy Institute — the intellectual infrastructure of the Clinton presidency era. The identity brief called for something that could operate credibly in Washington’s political environment without the visual language of either party: the clean, spaced serif wordmark with its understated rule achieves exactly that equilibrium, projecting authority without ideology.

Creative Direction, Art Direction, Identity Design, Custom Type, Glyph Modification, Graphic Standards, Environmental Signage, Illustration

CubeSmart — National Brand Identity and Graphic Standards

CubeSmart didn’t begin as CubeSmart. It began as U•Store•It — an established national self-storage chain with hundreds of facilities across the country. The decision to rebrand, and the new name itself, came from the client. What they needed was someone to make that name into a mark — and the mark into a complete, living brand system that could govern every touchpoint of a national retail operation.

That’s where I came in. Commissioned as an independent project during my tenure at Cisco Systems, this was one of those engagements that demanded the full range of what I do best: custom type design, proportional precision, and the discipline to build a visual identity system rigorous enough to survive intact across thousands of facilities, dozens of advertising formats, and years of operational use.

I designed the CubeSmart wordmark from scratch — custom-drawn letterforms with proprietary glyph modifications that give the mark its distinctive character and ensure it reads as a composed, unified whole. The cubic icon that accompanies the wordmark is deceptively simple: a three-dimensional form that communicates storage, structure, and spatial intelligence in a single gesture, drawn with the same precision and optical refinement as the letterforms it sits beside. The mark was built in both outlined and solid variants, with stroke weights specified to fractions of the cap height to ensure consistent reproduction across every application at every scale.

The engagement extended well beyond the mark into a comprehensive graphic standards manual — the document that transforms a logo into a living brand system. The manual specified everything: wordmark construction and minimum margin rules derived from the proportional relationships within the mark itself; a typographic system anchored by Gotham Condensed Bold for headline use, with precise leading, letterspacing, and kerning values specified for Adobe Illustrator production; disclaimer and legal type specifications; phone number formatting rules; color palette across print and digital applications; and layout proportion grids governing how brand elements relate to each other across every format.

That system was then applied across the full spectrum of CubeSmart’s physical and digital presence — outdoor and large-format advertising, banner and point-of-sale materials in multiple colorway variations, website UI design, and the launch campaign that announced the transformation to the world: “U-Store-It… Reinvented!” — a line that acknowledged the legacy directly while declaring the ambition of what was coming.

The standards also covered architectural signage, building facade treatments, interactive advertising templates, and employee uniforms — the full environmental and operational spectrum of a national retail brand. Every touchpoint, every format, every application governed by the same proportional logic and typographic discipline that begins in the wordmark itself.

CubeSmart remains in active national use today, visible on facilities across the country. That kind of longevity is the most honest measure of whether a brand identity was built to last.

Creative Direction; Logo Design; Typography Design; Graphic Standards; Indoor/Outdoor Signage; Operations Graphics

CarrAmerica — Brand Standards, Property Marketing, Print Collateral

CarrAmerica brand standards and property marketing folio showing graphic standards manual pages, property leasing brochures for Tollway Plaza, Hamilton Square, Redmond East Business Campus and Fairfax Corporate Park, floor plan production, CarrWorkplaces newsletter, seasonal greeting card, and print advertising — designed and produced by The Bloom Agency

CarrAmerica was one of the largest publicly traded office real estate investment trusts in the United States in the mid-1990s, operating commercial properties across major markets including Washington DC, Dallas, and the Pacific Northwest under the tagline “America’s Workplace.” Managing a national property portfolio at that scale requires more than a recognizable logo — it requires a brand system rigorous enough to govern every leasing brochure, every property advertisement, every floor plan package, and every piece of tenant communication across dozens of properties in multiple markets, produced consistently by different teams in different cities.

The Bloom Agency was engaged to formalize, document, and extend CarrAmerica’s existing brand identity into a reproducible graphic standards system — taking a light existing framework and building it into a comprehensive set of rules governing typography, layout dimensions, color application, marketing materials production, and collateral specifications across every format the organization used. The standards manual became the definitive reference for CarrAmerica’s marketing communications: every measurement specified, every typeface documented, every layout grid defined, so that the brand could be reproduced consistently whether the property was in Dallas, Redmond, or downtown Washington DC.

That system was then applied across a sustained engagement producing the full spectrum of CarrAmerica’s marketing collateral. Individual property leasing packages — each one a self-contained marketing document for a specific building or campus — were designed and produced for properties including Tollway Plaza in Dallas, Redmond East Business Campus in the Pacific Northwest, Hamilton Square on 14th Street in Washington DC, and Fairfax Corporate Park in Northern Virginia. Each package carried its own visual character appropriate to its market and property type while remaining unmistakably within the CarrAmerica brand framework.

The floor plan production work was particularly exacting — architectural floor plans rendered and formatted for leasing materials, with multi-tenant layout variations showing different configuration options for prospective tenants. Getting floor plans to read clearly and persuasively as marketing documents, rather than merely as technical drawings, requires a specific kind of visual intelligence that sits at the intersection of information design and brand communication.

The engagement also produced the CarrWorkplaces newsletter system, a seasonal corporate greeting card program, print advertising for available space across the portfolio, and a standardized leasing inquiry response and fulfillment package system — the complete communications infrastructure of a national commercial real estate operation.

Brand Standards Formalization, Documentation and Extension, Graphic Standards Manual, Property Leasing Brochures, Floor Plan Production, Print Advertising, Newsletter Design, Corporate Communications, Collateral Design, Print Production Management