Yesterday, Christophe Tauziet, a product designer at Facebook, shared a shot of the new Facebook logo. Reportedly designed by Facebook’s in-house team in collaboration with Eric Olson — the designer of Klavika, on which the original Facebook logo was based — the general reaction has so far been negative.
Some commenters have suggested that the logo is so bad, that it may simply be a hoax. Others have suggested that Facebook is mimicking Yahoo! in gauging public opinion before announcing a decision.
The ‘f’ appears to have the slightest of tweaks to its outer curve, but is otherwise unchanged. That is almost certainly a practical choice, given that modifying the ‘f’ would mean updating the familiar ‘f’ in a blue square logomark that is scattered across the Web.
The biggest change is the switch from a double-storey, to a single-storey ‘a’. The change increases the counter space and does an excellent job of balancing the more spacious double ‘o’ on the right-hand side of the word.
Lots of commentators have expressed a regret at the loss of the way in which the bar of old logo’s ‘f’ formed a connection with the stroke of the ‘a’; to me, that connection always seemed forced. This kind of linking is great when carefully worked — the Gillette logo is a prime example — but Facebook’s old logo felt like a designer looking for a connection for its own sake…on second thoughts, perhaps that was an ideal metaphor for Facebook.
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