It finally happened, after more than a decade of sticking to the same legacy, Microsoft has changed the Windows logo prior to the launch of their next big thing Windows 8.
In a post on the Windows website, Sam Moreau, the Principal Director of User Experience for Windows, said that the company had a number of goals in mind when creating the Windows 8 logo. One was using a font similar to the International Typographic Style that was an influenc on Metro’s design. He states:
Using bold flat colors and clean lines and shapes, the new logo has the characteristics of way-finding design systems seen in airports and subways.
Moreau added that Microsoft wanted the new logo to look like something created with digital materials rather than real world materials like glass or wood, saying, “It has motion – aligning with the fast and fluid style you’ll find throughout Windows 8.” He added:
Our final goal was for the new logo to be humble, yet confident. Welcoming you in with a slight tilt in perspective and when you change your color, the logo changes to reflect you. It is a “Personal” Computer after all.
Pentagram a third party design company, assisted Microsoft in the creation of the new Windows 8 logo. Among other things, Pentagram helped to create a new design for Time magazine and designed the logo for the Guitar Hero game franchise.
Moreau writes that in a meeting to discuss the new logo, one of Pentagram’s designers, Paula Scher, asked the question, “Your name is Windows. Why are you a flag?”
Take a look at a few of the versions along the way below
Indeed, as the blog shows, most of the previous versions of the Windows logo look more like a flag than a window, thanks to the logo looking like it is moving and flapping in the wind like a flag. However the very early versions of the Windows logo looked much more like a true window. Moreau writes:
“Windows” really is a beautiful metaphor for computing and with the new logo we wanted to celebrate the idea of a window, in perspective. Microsoft and Windows are all about putting technology in people’s hands to empower them to find their own perspectives. And that is what the new logo was meant to be. We did less of a re-design and more to return it to its original meaning and bringing Windows back to its roots – reimagining the Windows logo as just that – a window.
The new Windows 8 logo is certainly a big departure compared to the Windows 3.1, which all of the other Windows logos have emulated. While it still looks a bit like a stiff flag, it definitely has more of a true window design.
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