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The States, Vol. 2: Michigan, South Carolina, Rhode Island, Kansas, Idaho
Clean Sheet Co.'s The States project is off and running, and the response has been fantastic. Thanks for ordering shirts, giving feedback, and asking - quite loudly at times - when your state was coming. I promise you: it's coming! There are a lot of states, and Clean Sheet Co.'s going to get to them all (and then some).
The States, Vol. 1: California, Vermont, Louisiana, South Dakota, Maryland
Two years ago, I took a crack at giving major league baseball teams their own soccer jerseys. I had a blast â so much so that last year, I started Clean Sheet Co. to work on ambitious apparel design ideaslike that one. Our first big project? Designing t-shirts for every World Cup team. It was a fantastic success.
Itâs that time of year again. Iâm ready. Clean Sheet Co. is ready.
And the project? Hereâs what Iâm thinking.
âą While 32 Nations was a blast, this time I wanted design around something a little more timeless than a month-long event. (Weâll dive back into the world of big international competition soon enough â there are loads of interesting tournaments coming up, starting with the Womenâs World Cup this summer, and Clean Sheet Co. will be there.) I also wanted to stretch out the time frame a little bit â instead of dropping a ton of designs over a short period, I wanted to have the freedom to introduce and produce designs every week or so for a good while.
⹠I wanted to keep the ambitious nature of these projects intact - 30 MLB identies, 32 World Cup teams⊠if anything, I'd like to keep trying for bigger and bigger payoffs.
âą I wanted to bring the focus of my work back to the good old U.S. of A. after spending so much time thinking about international identities.
Everything led to one place.
Over the next several months, Iâll be creating and releasing t-shirt designs for each of the 50 U.S. States â and quite possibly a few bonus designs as well. Each one will be made available for purchase at the Clean Sheet Co. website. Iâm starting with five shirts today â more on those in a second â and batches of future designs will be released every few weeks. If you need a primer on my design technique, check out âThe Rulesâ, a piece that walks through the Clean Sheet Co. design process.
Thereâs obviously a ton of ground to cover. As you have probably surmised, the first five states are an eclectic bunch. Letâs dive in.
California
Identity Sketches for Louisville City FC
Authorâs note: Interested in more American soccer identity work? Iâve published pieces on several teams. Feel free to read on. San Jose Earthquakes New England Revolution New York City F.C. Columbus Crew Thanks for reading!
Soccer continues to gain ground on the American sporting landscape in a manner almost unimaginable even a few years ago. Pro teams are being founded in cities where fans are banding togetherâbefore they even have a team to root forâand demonstrating the strength of their potential market. The success stories have gotten almost too frequent to count; the most recent is Louisville City FC, who announced that theyâll soon begin play in a lower-tier US league. This decision was based in no small part on the work of the passionate Louisville Coopers supportersâ group, who rallied soccer fans under colors, a logo and a frame of mind, and who are sure to support the new club well.
The thing is, once passionate fans are involved, their passion extends to every avenue of fandom. Good fans demand first-rate treatmentâand why shouldnât they get it, after paving the way for a potential team? Groups like the Coopers want a club whoâs worthy of they way they put themselves out there; they want something worth rooting passionately for.
Design, of course, is often read as a shorthand for intention. (In the realm of sports, this usually a good instinct.) A club that takes the time to put forth good design work is judged to care about difference-making things like front-office competence and fan relations. Clubs who donâtâwho slap together something off the shelf, or who neglect the issue altogetherâare often perceived to be obtuse, out of the loop, or not good at the details that breed success.
All that is to say: Louisville City FC premiered their crest earlier this week. It was not, to be kind, a landmark piece of design work. It included odd shading, bulging backgrounds, un-cared-for typography, and perhaps worst of all, off-the-shelf, unmodified clip art.
(It should also be mentioned that the Coopers supportersâ group, whose founding and graphic identity predated LCFCâs, had long been rallying behind their own quite competent soccer crest-style logo. The bar had already been set; sadly, it was not met.)
What happened next is familiar to anyone who pays attention to the power of social media. Fans, including many Coopers members who would be expected to care about the team, buy its merchandise, and embrace its identity, were vocally negative. This quickly led to alternative designs being submitted for consideration, a hashtag, and pretty soon after, the clubâs owner declaring that he would accept proposals for a new crest.
The reaction was justifiable. But in all the tumult, itâs easy to miss one thing: there are good ideas buried in the logo nobody wanted to love. First of all, clip art aside, Louisville has a strong association with the fleur-de-lis symbol, which has appeared on its flag and civic marks for more than a century. It deserves to be there.
The longest-tenured flag of Louisville, Kentucky, featuring the fleur-de-lis.
And then, of course, the barrel. Louisville City attempted to show the wooden panels and metal hoops of a barrel on its crest, and though the execution was lacking, the idea was solid. Kentucky is bourbon country, of course, and Louisville is the proud world capital of bourbon whiskey. Bourbon is aged in barrels, and the barrel idea has a lot of good graphic traction among potential supporters. The Louisville Coopers themselves were named after real coopers, those who partake in the age-old profession of barrel-making; they also feature a barrel on their logo. Most of the subsequent community submissions did as well. Itâs a good idea.
The trusty bourbon barrel.
Hereâs where every crest idea, from LCFCâs to the community submissions, falls short for me. The barrel is a perfectly fine visual idea for a Louisville logo - recognizable, proportionate, and unique to the region. Unfortunately, though, a single barrel is a pretty stereotypical thing to design with. Either you need to use a same-y, clip-art-esque vector with slats and hoops, or you can try to make it a little more visually interesting, which invariably ends up making a fancy-looking barrel. Fancy just doesnât work; I mean, itâs a barrel. Itâs a pretty plain thing.
This left me with the kind of design problem I love to contemplate: how best to represent a barrel on a unique Louisville City FC crest? When I figured out the answer (after some sketching and some coffee; bourbon would have surely helped) I knew I wanted to flesh out the design for the club, just to see the idea to fruition.
So, what was that answer?
It hit me like a ton of, well, barrels, I guess. A single barrel isnât evocative enough, and itâs hard to design with. Itâs plain, and also a little lonely. Plus, you never see a bourbon barrel by itself; itâs always in a group, stacked up and aging in a distillery. Eureka; pass the Makerâs Mark. Barrels belonged together, not left alone in solitary! A group of barrelsâlike those on shelves, aging away to perfection in the secret bourbon-filled lairs of Louisvilleâwas a perfect symbol for togetherness, teamwork, and community.
Plus, it looks really cool.
Bourbon barrels, doing their thing.
Shelves or racks of bourbon barrels made for an interesting starting point. From there, I used a version of the teamsâ colors (more on that in a second), worked in a focal fleur-de-lis, and I had it.
My version of a Louisville City FC crest. Itâs strong, simple, and universally adaptableâyet still interesting. Itâs also pretty dang unique, as soccer crests go. What went into it?
âą A roundel-style crest, easy to reproduce and echoing the shapes it contains. âą A blue-ish/purple background, striking a compromise between the purple the club wants to use (for affiliation reasons) and the blue of the Coopers and of traditional civic symbols. âą Three rows of golden barrelsâthe gold also a compromise between the shade LCFC had debuted and the more direct yellow used by supporters and the city. Why three golden yellow rows? To honor the three yellow fleur-de-lis symbols on the original city flag, itself adapted from one of the personal flags that George Rogers Clark (founding father of Louisville and American revolutionary) would fly as he rode into battle. ⹠Ten barrels in all (3-4-3), a number that works for a variety of reasons; no least of which is that when paired with the final piece⊠⹠A single white fleur-de-lis, it creates a crest containing 11 elements, the number of players on a soccer field. (Which player does the fleur-de-lis symbolize? Perhaps the clubâs future captain could wear a fleur-de-lis armband on the pitch.) âą Finally, the crest is framed with the words âLouisville City FC" atop and below.
Simple, traditional, but pretty fresh at the same time. Here are some cool things it can do.
Mono
You can render this crest in one color if necessary - an absolute foundational element of good identity design. It looks bad-ass in one color, too.
Alternates
Why not go brighter sometimes? Within this system, it can be done; here, using just two colors brightens up the look. Of course, when called for, a darker look can be useful too.
The dark look is one of my favorites, because it really allows the fleur-de-lis element to pop. Alsoâthis look helps you see a hidden element to the logo - a figure clutching and embracing the fleur-de-lis (Do you see it? His head is the middle barrel on the top row, and his arms are the two barrels on either side of the white fleur-de-lis.) This is an fun little easter egg and a great way to evoke Louisville City supportersâ love for their city and their team.
You can also get quite minimal with the logo; here, itâs stripped of its containing circle, again rendered in inverse mono colors, and it works perfectly. This version of the logo could pair well with a very colorful jersey, for instance.
Finally, itâs very flexible. Hereâs one simple example of extending the logo into new color spaces. As far as sporting allegiances go, Louisville is often depicted as divided into red and blue factions; this club should bring both them together. Perhaps, for a special occasion (like honoring existing Louisville and Kentucky fans) a special logo is in order?
Thatâs just one of an infinite amount of approaches to adapting this particular identity.
Variations
You could also extend the mark by playing with its elements. Here, we have a slogan (âWelcome to bourbon countryâ) replacing the LCFC tagline, and flour-de-lis elements repeating for emphasis. This mark could symbolize fan support - the casks almost look like heads in a crowd. Next to that, the round barrels are rendered by themselves, containing the letters that spell Louisville.
These are just playful ways to extend the brand; again, many more could be developed in time.
Apparel
Whatâs a mark without some apparel? First, a simple t-shirt.
Pretty nice; Iâd wear it. And of course, the crest is nothing if it doesnât look good on a jersey.
In Sum
Louisville City FC has its work cut out for it. It has fans who demand strong management, and itâs now in the public position of committing to good design.
This exercise - like all of the design work I feature on this site - is fun and instructive for me to do. I hope the designer who ends up working with Louisville City has as much respect for the passion of American soccer supporters as I do, and has as much fun on the project as I did.
Good luck, Coopers!
This piece was written and produced, and the marks within designed, by Mark Willis. For questions or comment, find Mark at (@M_Willis). If you like this design work, check out Clean Sheet Co., Markâs apparel design company, and the 32 Nations Project, about designing expressive shirts for every single 2014 World Cup team. If you want to know a little more about Mark, check out the features at the top of the page, or check out his brief bio. Thanks for reading!
From time to time I find stuff worth sharing and commenting on that doesn't fit here. I also like to publish my own photography, artwork, and other media when I can, but I don't want to overload this spot. Enter: Stuff I Like (stuff.mwillis.com), a place to throw links, creative stuff and ephemera. Expect a mix of design, web, soccer, photography, art and mascot videos, roughly in that order.
Or, in brief:
Stuff I'm making, finding and enjoying. Images, sounds, videos, links and what have you, from M.Willis.

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32 Nations, Group F: Argentina, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Iran, Nigeria
Our penultimate group has a lot to love: nations from four different confederations, and four very different parts of the globe. Argentina is a strong favorite, of course - they seem incredibly likely to move on from this group of four - but the other spot is anyone's guess. Bosnia-Herzegovina are making their World Cup debut as an independent nation, and strong qualifying play notwithstanding, it's tough to know just how the world stage will suit them. Iran haven't had much success, yet, in a World Cup, but are always one of Asia's toughest sides. And Nigeria have the talent and experience to make things interesting for the higher seeds, but their form next summer is far from certain.
I say Argentina (with confidence) and Nigeria (with hesitation) pull it off. From a visual perspective, Group F is unique - it's the group the fewest fiery red/orange/yellow colors, almost none at all to speak of. Cool colors (blues, whites and greens) dominate. Will that give the matches in the group a distinctive tenor? And what does that mean for their 32 Nations designs? Let's check it out.
Argentina
32 Nations, Group D: Uruguay, Costa Rica, England, Italy
There's nowhere to hide in Group D. Â With three clubs in the world's top 15, and a fourth who can beat anyone (just ask Concacaf). Â Uruguay will feel a little pressure playing as a seed, close to home, and with Luis Suarez at the absolute apex of his career. Â England will feel pressure because they're English. Â Italy will feel pressure, but they've built their entire footballing strategy about turning pressure in on itself. Â It's going to get dicey; my picks: Uruguay and England (somehow).Â
And as far as the design implications, there's a lot to tackle. Let's go:
Uruguay
32 Nations, Group B: Spain, The Netherlands, Chile, Australia
The 32 Nations project continues on with Group B! The matchup between 2010 finalists will get all the press here, but I think Chile is coming out of this region, one way or another. Australia is a spoiler, fully capable of drawing or even beating a favorite that expects a result. The second-place finisher will likely play Brazil in the round of 16 - so the scramble should be especially intense through all three games.
On-field exploits aside, let's get to the important stuff: how does Group B stack up, design-wise? Let's take a look.
Spain