LIGHT · Lab for Innovation in Global Health Technology

Logo review

Five final-draft directions for this stage, shown in grayscale so we can focus on form before color. Below is a short note on giving feedback that helps — then the five options with a little context on each.

A quick word on feedback

A logo isn't art we're admiring — it's a tool we're about to put to work for the program. So the most useful thing any of us can do is notice how each option will behave out in the world. A few things that tend to make these conversations better:

01

Start with the job, not the art

We're not picking the prettiest mark — we're picking the one that best does a job. Quick reminder of that job: signal credible, international, institutional to a healthcare CEO; hold up next to the Chamber, Vanderbilt, and Global Health Connector; work everywhere from a favicon to a banner. Everything below is easier if we keep measuring against that.

02

Try "this works for ___ because"

Taste is hard to act on; fit is easy. Instead of "I like #3," something like "#3 works for reaching executives because it feels established" gives us a reason we can weigh. And "#5 might be a problem on a name badge because the frame gets busy" is gold — it's a real, fixable observation.

03

Bring the problem; let the designer bring the fix

The most useful notes point at a problem, not a solution. "The G closes up when it's small" helps more than "make the G rounder" — it tells the designer what to solve and leaves them room to solve it well. If a note doesn't tie back to the job, it's probably a preference (which is fine to name, just good to label).

04

Reactions welcome, votes not needed

This isn't a tally. One sharp observation about how a mark will behave in the real world is worth more than five thumbs-ups. Rob owns the final call — the group's job is to surface what he can't see alone, so honest reactions help most.

05

Three separate decisions

It's easy to blur these, so let's keep them apart: the concept/mark (does the idea serve the program?), the typeface (legible? right tone?), and color — which we're deliberately leaving out today. That's why everything's in grayscale; don't let a gray render talk you out of a mark.

06

It's fine to set options down

Four of these five won't get used, and that's the point of showing five. Setting a mark aside isn't a knock on it — it just wasn't the right tool for this particular job. No need to defend one out of politeness.

The five options

What you're looking at

Notes describe the concept and construction only — they're context to react to, not a recommendation.

01

The sandwich

Wordmark-led · horizontal · no separate mark

LIGHT leads as a heavy geometric sans, with the full name stretched to its exact width — Lab for Innovation on top, in Global Health Technology below. The descriptor becomes structure, framing the word like a masthead. Symmetrical and stable; the wordmark carries the identity.

02

The landing strip

Wordmark + mark · horizontal

A parallelogram in perspective — a platform or runway seen at an angle — with a raised diagonal plank. The slant reads as both forward motion and a surface to land on. Paired with a lighter-weight wordmark and a title-case descriptor.

03

The type interface

Wordmark-led · stacked · no separate mark

Purely typographic. LIGHT is set in a bold oblique that leans forward, with the crossbar of the H extended to a point. An uppercase descriptor stacks beneath. The letterforms carry the motion; there is no separate symbol.

04

The converging spectrum

Wordmark + mark · horizontal

A spectrum of rays converging toward a single point — many origins focusing on one. Graduated segments and fine lines give the mark depth and a sense of light being focused. The most detailed of the marks.

05

The landing / the frame

Wordmark + mark · stacked · mark stands alone

A tilted, soft-cornered frame with an object settling inside — a window or door with something arriving in it. The negative space doubles as an L. Stacked and centered; the mark can stand on its own without the wordmark.