Our visual identity is deliberately eclectic — a fusion of **Bauhaus typography, natural sciences field journals, and B&W and infrared photography**. Each element serves a purpose: - **Bauhaus typography** provides the rational foundation — clarity, structure, and disciplined hierarchy. It reflects the engineered rigor of our systems and keeps our compositions clean, functional, and legible. - **Field journal illustration** introduces a human, observational quality. Like naturalist plates, our diagrams are studies of an ecosystem: annotated, contextual, and exploratory. This conveys curiosity and trustworthiness without the sterility of typical corporate diagrams. - **Infrared photography** adds a layer of revelation. It suggests that we see beneath the obvious surface — uncovering hidden patterns, structures, and truths that aren’t visible to the naked eye. This aligns metaphorically with our mission: exposing the invisible scaffolding of reasoning and collaboration. Together, these influences create a brand voice that is **timeless, precise, and curious**. It distinguishes us in a market saturated with glossy “AI slop” and derivative Apple/Google-inspired interfaces. Ours is an identity that signals both **scientific seriousness and creative exploration** — a system built for depth, not trend. ## Visual Identity: Do & Don’t Board ## ✅ Do - **Typography (Bauhaus influence):** - Use only approved strong humanist sans or geometric sans-serifs (Inter, Helvetica Neue, Futura, Avenir) in that order of preference. - Emphasize clear hierarchy: grid layouts, generous spacing, strict alignment. - Favor all-caps headers with restrained weight. or mixed case headers with stronger weight, as suitable, but never together in the same document. - **Illustration (Field Journal style):** - Employ hand-drawn copperplate-style linework. - Use subtle watercolor washes for grouping/context. - Annotate with small labels, numbering, or marginalia — like a scientific plate. - Maintain a sense of restraint: diagrams feel studied, not decorative. - **Photography (Infrared influence):** - High-contrast B&W infrared or false-color IR with natural subject matter (flora, fauna, landscapes). - Highlight hidden textures (leaf veins, canopy structures, coral, termite mounds). - Keep tone observational, almost documentary. - Look for mathematical, symmetrical, or self-organising/emergent structure as metaphor. - **Tone:** - Serious but curious. - Precision over polish. - Observational, not salesy. --- ## ❌ Don’t - **Typography:** - Avoid trendy display fonts, script styles, or overuse of italics. - Don’t mix too many typefaces; consistency is critical. - **Illustration:** - Avoid cartoonish vector icons or corporate clip-art. - Don’t use bright, flat infographic colors. - No glossy gradients, 3D bevels, or skeuomorphic UI. - **Photography:** - Avoid stocky, staged human imagery (e.g., “smiling people in offices”). - Don’t use saturated, lifestyle-style photos — they break the scientific tone. - No generic tech clichés (server racks, neon circuit boards). - **Tone:** - Don’t be flashy or trend-driven. - Avoid “AI slop” aesthetics (glowing brains, robot hands, circuitry, endless hexagons). --- ## Summary Every visual element should feel like it belongs to a **field journal of modern intelligence systems**: - Structured by Bauhaus typography. - Illustrated like a naturalist’s plate. - Photographed like an unseen spectrum of reality.