Roughly
25
years
after
it
launched
payment
processing,
PayPal
is
“ushering
in
a
new
era
for
customers”
with
some
generic
black
text.
The
company
has
a
new
logo,
designed
by
Pentagram,
that
looks
incredibly
plain
—
especially
compared
to
previous
iterations
of
the
logo
that
featured
a
rakish
slant,
two
shades
of
blue,
and
prominent
PayPal
P’s.
The
evolution
of
PayPal’s
logo.Image:
PayPal
The
company
justifies
the
change
by
saying
that
the
new
black
standalone
wordmark
won’t
be
confused
with
the
rest
of
the
payments
processing
world
—
especially
“the
blue
that
has
become
synonymous
with
fintech.”
That
is
a
very
blue
word.Image:
PayPal
Also
seeing
a
lot
of
blue
here.Image:
PayPal
But
even
if
PayPal
doesn’t
intend
to
prioritize
the
black
wordmark,
it
will
be
in
the
good
company
of
many
other
firms
that
have
moved
from
something
fun
and
recognizable
to
boring,
plain
text!
Here’s
GoDaddy,
Petco,
and
Johnson
&
Johnson
(hat
tip
to
Parker
Lee’s
“worst
logos”
lists):
Image:
GoDaddy
via
Fast
Company
Juxtaposition
by
Parker
Lee
Juxtaposition
by
Parker
Lee
It
also
joins
the
fine
tradition
of
flattening
logos
just
for
the
sake
of
them
being
flat
and
inserting
weird
corporate
synergy
for
some
reason.
Here,
that
synergy
is
actually
accomplished
only
when
PayPal
chooses
to
use
colors
alongside
the
wordmark:
“Bright
blue
and
deep
blue
overlap
to
reveal
Venmo
blue,”
writes
Pentagram.
It
does
seem
like
Pentagram
put
a
good
bit
of
thought
into
this,
coming
up
with
a
“new
bespoke
brand
typeface,
PayPal
Pro,”
which
it
says
is
based
on
LL
Supreme,
which,
in
turn,
is
based
on
Futura.
We
also
appreciated
the
use
of
alliteration:
“The
colors
have
been
calibrated
for
continuous
contrast,
to
create
a
sense
of
depth
and
dimension.”
For
what
it’s
worth,
the
pitched
PayPal
P’s
persist:
they
should
appear
when
you
pay
digitally.
The
old
PayPal
P’s
show
up
and
circle
when
you
pay
with
a
watch,
it
seems.Image:
PayPal
An
example
digital
payment.Image:
PayPal
Technically,
it
looks
like
PayPal
already
started
using
the
new
wordmark
earlier
this
month,
though
it
says
it’ll
formally
launch
with
the
new
PayPal
debit
card
—
and
a
new
ad
campaign
starring
Will
Ferrell,
which
you
can
check
out
below.
Original author: Sean Hollister
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