Sign identity that became part of a UNESCO World Heritage Site!
For the first part, we chose red sandstone as the base for all the signage elements.
Red sandstone gave us a colour that married well with the redbrick architecture of the
complex
For the first part, we chose red sandstone as the base for all the signage elements.
Red sandstone gave us a colour that married well with the redbrick architecture of the
complex
Keeping it clean and simple was the only brief we got from this, quintessentially British brand; and clean and simple has been our engineering mantra ever since we started producing and implementing M&S signage assets across the country, eight years ago!
The signage of AMPM Cafe & Bar at Gurgaon, is a coming together of the modern and classic palettes. The classy forest green base with copper framework houses the modern-day iconography with chunky acrylic box-type letters illuminated using LED modules.
For an organisation that anchors the change in the fabric of technology innovation in India, the experiential graphics at its corporate office in Noida needed to be colourful, vibrant and full of impact.
Working with Ultraconfidentiel has always been an opportunity for us to explore a wide spectrum of signage and branding material.
Much of our ability to take risks and innovate as signage makers comes from the patronage of arguably the best cinema experience globally.
Much of our ability to take risks and innovate as signage makers comes from the patronage of arguably the best cinema experience globally.
We fell in love with the combination of whites and yellows while working on this project along with the amazing architects at Ultraconfidentiel and the projects and design team of Imperativ Hotels.
Pernod Ricard’s entrance sign at their Delhi office and the place-maker wall in the reception lounge are one of the most intricate works of signage engineering and making we’ve done in a long time.
Rooftop signs are always a complex deal and if the towers have glazed facades the complexity gets a couple of notches higher. The CLIX rooftop sign at this DLF tower was no different.