For this project, I built Rachel's brand identity and narrative around the same natives and wild flowers that Rachel found herself always returning to in her work. The primary logo mark centers on an illustrated echinacea, drawn in her own linocut vocabulary, then refined into something that could live at any size, on any surface. A script wordmark moves smoothly alongside it with the same loose energy as her printed line work, and a set of secondary marks give the brand room to breathe across different contexts and tiled backgrounds.
For the color palette, I chose hues that nod to a garden in full bloom: marigold, periwinkle, soft pink, and eucalyptus. I intentially chose colors that feel bright and bold not only by themselves, but belong together the way that wildflowers do.
The result was a visual identity for a personal brand that feels grown, not assembled. By using elements from Rachel's own artwork, her brand's logo and identity feels unmistakably hers before you've even read her name. 🎨