The Trademarks of Paul Rand
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Comprehensive examination of corporate identity development from concept to application. Featured detailed case studies of major projects including IBM, Westinghouse, and ABC.
Design Form and Chaos
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My final major work on design theory. Addressed the relationship between creativity and discipline, chaos and order, in visual communication.
Thoughts on Design
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My first book established the philosophical foundation for modern graphic design practice. Explored the relationship between form, function, and commercial communication.
Paul Rand: A Designer's Art
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Comprehensive overview of my work from 1930-1985. Case studies in systematic thinking, visual problem-solving, and the business impact of design excellence.
From Lascaux to Brooklyn
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Autobiographical reflection on six decades in design. From Brooklyn art student to corporate America's most trusted visual voice—lessons learned along the way.
I Know a Lot of Things
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Applied systematic design principles to children's literature. Simple geometric illustrations supporting clear narrative structure.
Why Footnote systems separate amateur blogs from authoritative publishing
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Footnotes
Footnotes serve as essential tools in academic and professional writing, providing valuable supplementary information without disrupting the main text.
Rand is live
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Rand is here. Clean, minimal, flexible Ghost theme for creators who want to focus on content.
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Now One
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Honored with the highest recognition in American graphic design. "For lifetime achievement in advancing the profession through innovative work
Featured on Ghost Marketplace
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Officially featured by Ghost as a recommended theme. From late-night coding sessions to Ghost's homepage. Sometimes the simple
14 sections and counting
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Homepage builder is coming together.
Drag-and-drop components from Ghost admin - no code needed.
* Portfolio showcase ✓
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The systematic thinking behind the IBM eight-bar logo that saved a corporation
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When IBM approached me in 1972, they needed more than a new logo—they needed a new identity. The eight-bar mark wasn't just aesthetic; it was strategic communication that unified a sprawling technology company under one clear visual voice.