This project documents the design of a corporate identity standards manual for Polar, structured as an editorial system that defines logo usage, color application, hierarchy, and reproduction rules across print contexts. The publication positions brand guidelines not simply as technical instruction, but as a designed reading experience: large-format imagery, controlled whitespace, and a restrained typographic palette establish a clear visual rhythm while reinforcing the brand’s association with glacier landscapes and cold-weather environments.
The manual’s layout was developed using a classical page harmony construction, which established the proportional relationship between the text block, margins, and spread composition. From this geometric framework, an editorial system was built to organize narrative content, technical standards, and visual examples with consistency and clarity. Introductory spreads establish brand context through image-led pacing and generous margins, while later pages shift into a more systematic structure built around modular layouts, typographic hierarchy, and repeated alignment strategies.
As a portfolio project, the work demonstrates publication design as systems thinking. It shows how identity standards can be communicated through page architecture, proportion, typography, and controlled repetition rather than through dense technical formatting alone. The project also reflects cross-media design reasoning by translating a logo and color system into reproducible rules for application, legibility, and consistency.
Methods / process statement
Designed using a classical page harmony construction to establish the proportional text block, margin structure, and overall spread composition. Editorial grids, hierarchical typographic structures, and repeatable page templates were then developed from this geometric framework to organize logo applications, color specifications, and standards content with visual continuity and production-aware clarity throughout the manual.
Classical page-construction diagram used to establish the proportional text block and margin structure of the Polar corporate identity manual, based on Renaissance book design canons and the double-page Van de Graaf construction.
Mockup of the completed Polar corporate identity manual, presenting the standards guide as a cohesive printed publication.
Polar stationery system including letterhead, business cards, and envelopes in front and back views, demonstrating the application of the corporate identity across coordinated print materials.

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