Design is Pattern Recognition: The Art of Logos & Lettering
Jessica Hische
Lettering Artist & Logo Designer (Tiffany, Nike, Apple)
DESIGN CRAFT
Core Insight
Everyone Reads Design Better Than They Know
"Most people are endless absorbers of patterns and information as they move through the world. Even as a non-designer, you can sense when something's not right with a logo—you just don't know how to name it."
Design literacy is subconscious but pervasive
You absorb visual patterns all day without realizing it
Good design feels right; bad design feels off
The goal: make people feel something, even if they can't articulate it
Broad refresh: Shift vibe to reach new audience without alienating core users
Legibility fixes: Misreads or glaring problems that people are too close to notice
Expansion refresh: New website, new app, major product rollout, conference launch
Key metric: Custom vs. FreeUsing available fonts and free logos makes you easy to copy. Custom work is your moat.
Perfect timingPrint swag for new hires, host a conference, expand to new market—these are moments to refresh before physical rollout.
The Design Process
Scope, Iterate, Trust, Repeat
Round 1: Determine scope (close-in vs. broad), keep goals visible throughout
Round 2: Narrow the look—refine weight, letter height, details
Round 3: Get nerdier—optical corrections, edge cases, consistency checks
Frankensteining: Mix and match elements from different directions to test combinations
Trust the process: Sometimes clients need to walk down a path before realizing the earlier direction was right
The handwriting vs. block debate
Handwritten feels alive and unique, but block letters give you a system to build from. Use both—one for primary mark, one for headlines and secondary system.
The brand system paradox
Too many assets = complexity that requires a 500-page brand book. The best logos are intuitive enough that non-designers can use them correctly by feel.
Optical Weight
The Hidden Art of Typography
Geometry + optics: a perfect circle doesn't always look like a circle
Visual weight: where two strokes join, you must subtract actual weight to look balanced
The lowercase R: the top is narrower than the bottom to correct for the shoulder join
Mark legibility: at a glance, your logo must be read instantly and correctly (no misreads)
Exercise for beginnersOpen Figma, zoom in on a single letter until it fills the page. Draw vertical lines and circles to check if white space is actually equal. You'll see the optical tricks everywhere.
Contrarian Design Truths
What Design Legends Get Wrong
✗Brand should drive company cultureINSTEAD →✓ The product, team, and people drive culture. Brand amplifies what's already there.
✗Heavy brand investment early always pays offINSTEAD →✓ Early-stage companies pivot. Better to have something decent, then refresh later when you know who you are.
✗Brand complexity = brand strengthINSTEAD →✓ The best logos are simple enough that anyone can use them correctly without a manual. Design should teach itself.
✗Brand is always the heroINSTEAD →✓ Sometimes brand should be invisible so the product is the star. Context determines whether brand leads or supports.