Difference between revisions of "Branding"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(Removed redirect to McNair Center Branding) Tag: Removed redirect |
|||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
*Georgetown University is blue and grey: https://www.georgetown.edu/color-guide/ | *Georgetown University is blue and grey: https://www.georgetown.edu/color-guide/ | ||
− | {| class="wikitable" | + | {| class="wikitable sortable" |
|- style="vertical-align:bottom;" | |- style="vertical-align:bottom;" | ||
! University | ! University | ||
Line 71: | Line 71: | ||
| | | | ||
|- style="vertical-align:bottom;" | |- style="vertical-align:bottom;" | ||
− | | Average | + | | '''Average''' |
| #00234F | | #00234F | ||
| #2E7BB1 | | #2E7BB1 |
Revision as of 11:15, 14 September 2020
Palette
Inspiration
The colors are inspired in part by my universities:
- UCL is orange and black: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/cam/brand/guidelines/colour
- UBC is blue and grey: https://brand.ubc.ca/guidelines/downloads/ubc-colour-and-fonts/
- U.C. Berkeley is blue and gold: https://brand.berkeley.edu/colors/
- Imperial College London is blue and grey: https://www.imperial.ac.uk/brand-style-guide/visual-identity/brand-colours/
- Rice University is blue and grey: https://brand.rice.edu/design-elements
- Georgetown University is blue and grey: https://www.georgetown.edu/color-guide/
University | Dark Blue | Light Blue | Dark Grey | Light Grey | Gold | Orange |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
UCL | #EA7600 | |||||
UBC | #002145 | #00A7E1 | ||||
Berkeley | #003262 | #3B7EA1 | #888888 | #EEEEEE | #FDB515 | #C4820E |
Imperial | #002147 | #003E74 | #9D9D9D | #EBEEEE | #EC7300 | #D24000 |
Rice | #00205B | #ADC7DC | #7C7E7F | #E0E2E6 | #E9A139 | #C04829 |
Georgetown | #041E42 | #003DA5 | #63666A | #BBBCBC | ||
Average | #00234F | #2E7BB1 | #818283 | #DDDEDF | #F0981A | #D04C0D |
Note that UBC has hex codes and RBG codes that don't match. I used the hex codes. A spreadsheet doing the math is in E:\projects\WebDesign\Colors.xlsx
See also
The McNair Center Branding used a variant on the Baker Institute's colors, which had obvious issues.