Design Pulse Vol. 19
Can Design Build Unity?
This week, three stories ask whether design can be a unifying force?
Design Pulse Vol. 19
Can Design Build Unity?
In a fractured world, brands are increasingly tasked with being more than just logos and campaigns. They’re being asked to build bridges—between patients and care, fans and culture, nostalgia and progress. This week, three stories ask whether design can be a unifying force, or whether it risks widening divides when trust is fragile.
Blood Cancer United Rebrand
A single voice for many lives
Where does brand language make care feel more human—and where does it get in the way?
My Take
Healthcare branding walks a razor’s edge: too clinical and it feels cold, too emotional and it risks losing authority. Blood Cancer United lands in the middle, grounding its identity in lived experiences. The drop-shaped mark is simple yet powerful, but what’s striking is the voice: plain, direct, and human. This isn’t design for vanity; it’s design for coordination.
“Rooted in real stories that create meaningful connections.” — Creative Bloq
What happened
A new identity unifies fragmented charities under one banner. Visual clarity; a tone “rooted in real stories” to build trust and connection.
Why it matters
In health, unity isn’t a vibe—it’s coordination. Clear symbols + a compassionate voice reduce friction for patients, carers, and clinicians.
Question
What’s your “do-not-change” core—and how do you modernize everything else?
Eurovision 70 Rebrand
Global identity, local authorship
A one-woman studio in Sheffield, UK led the new global identity for Eurovision’s 70th.
My Take
Eurovision has always been about spectacle, but beneath the glitter lies a cultural experiment in unity. The new identity signals that unification doesn’t require a corporate juggernaut—it can come from one designer, interpreting a global phenomenon with local sensitivity. It’s a reminder that design at its best is democratic: crafted in one place, resonant everywhere.
“United by Music.”
What happened
A one-woman studio in Sheffield led the new global identity for Eurovision’s 70th. The line stays: “United by Music.”
Why it matters
Unity scales when authorship stays close to culture. Big-tent systems don’t need big agencies—they need a clear proposition and craft.
Question
Can small teams keep global brands honest—closer to fans, faster to adapt?
Adapt or Die
When overhauls divide
Frontify’s round-up asks when total rebrands work—and when they break trust.
My Take
Rebrands are always judged emotionally before rationally. The tension lies in asking people to let go of symbols they’ve tied to their identity. As James Kirkham notes, nostalgia acts as an anchor; it keeps people steady when the world feels unstable. In design, this means balance: evolve enough to stay relevant, but protect enough to remain trusted. Too often, companies confuse change with progress.
“People are hyper-sensitive to rebrands… nostalgia is the anchor now.” — James Kirkham (via It’s Nice That)
It’s Nice That (Frontify partnership):
What happened
Frontify’s round-up asks when total rebrands work—and when they break trust.
Why it matters
In a high-flux world, people grip the familiar. Push too far and you snap the bond.
Question
What’s your “do-not-change” core—and how do you modernize everything else?
Design Pulse Vol. 19
So, can design build unity?
Where does brand language make care feel more human—and where does it get in the way?
Closing Reflection
So, can design build unity? The answer seems to be: only if it listens first. Whether guiding patients through care, helping fans feel part of something bigger, or reimagining a legacy brand without breaking bonds, design isn’t just aesthetics—it’s cultural infrastructure. The challenge isn’t just to look modern; it’s to feel trustworthy, human, and shared.