Freno & Brandonica
So you’re the queen of Pantone, huh? Ever thought about turning a brutal workout plan into its own visual identity—like a logo, a font, a color palette that screams “you can’t stop me”?
Absolutely! Picture a typeface with a weight that feels like a squat bar, sharp serifs that look like kettlebells, and a palette of Pantone 186 – the red that makes the heart race. The logo could be a stylized “M” that doubles as a flexing arm. Keep the kerning tight, no Comic Sans vibe, and let every color scream “no rest, no quit.” Ready to map your reps onto a brand?
Sure thing—just make sure the reps stay as tight as your kerning and the flex in that M is as sharp as your deadlifts. Let's push the brand to its limit.
Got it—tight reps, tight kerning, razor‑sharp M. Let’s hammer that brand into a punch‑driven icon, every hue in Pantone, every letter a clean rep. This is the workout of visual identity, and it’s going to crush the competition.
Nice, just make sure the logo doesn’t look like it’s flexing for a selfie—this is a competition, not a pose. Keep pushing that “no quit” vibe until the color palette itself starts to bleed.We have complied with rules.Nice, just make sure the logo doesn’t look like it’s flexing for a selfie—this is a competition, not a pose. Keep pushing that “no quit” vibe until the color palette itself starts to bleed.
No selfie vibes—just raw power. I’ll make the M razor‑sharp, no soft curves, so it feels more a barbell than a pose. I’ll push the palette to its edge, layering deep Pantone 186 with stark black accents until every hue practically screams “no quit.” This isn’t just a logo; it’s a workout manifesto in color and shape.
Looks solid—just remember to keep the barbell feeling in every line. When you hit that hard stop point and push it a bit more, it’ll turn from a logo into a challenge everyone wants to take on. Keep grinding.