Variloom

↳ Challenge

Variloom emerged from Moon Creative Lab—an innovation studio within Japan-based global trading and investment company Mitsui—with an ambitious goal: to reinvent circularity for the textile and apparel industries.

At the center is a patent-pending 3D printing system and bio-based filament designed for ultra-efficient fabrication of fully recyclable, performance-grade textiles.

Landscape was engaged to define the foundational elements of the brand—including its name, identity, and messaging—as the team prepared to bring this next-generation platform out of stealth mode.

 

↳ Opportunity

Through an expansive naming exploration, we arrived at the name Variloom—a trademarkable, globally viable name that stands for freeform versatility, and applies the idea of weaving to 3D fabrication. The name captures the system’s promise: advanced customization, minimal waste, and fully recyclable fabrics, beyond the limits of conventional production.

We crafted concise messaging that signals Variloom’s position at the intersection of materiality, creativity, and circularity. The platform’s benefits—print-to-shape flexibility, customizable and responsible material usage, reduced waste, lead times, and on-demand production—offer apparel manufacturers a radical alternative to traditional methods.

The identity system balances a refined, natural feel with a technological edge—reflecting the unique material qualities of the printed fabrics. We designed a custom wordmark, a restrained color palette, and soft, modular design elements that suggest tactility and movement. An MVP landing page was designed to introduce the brand, drive interest and engagement from early-stage partners and investors in the category.

 

↳ Outcome

Variloom launched as a standout player in circular material fabrication, gaining industry attention by winning the ISPO 2024 Award in collaboration with global surfwear brand Rip Curl. The product features a 3D-printed waistband for water stability, integrated ventilation panels for comfort, and a recyclable blend of bio-based plastics and wool for durability and end-of-life recovery.

As brands seek solutions that balance performance, customization while advancing sustainability, Variloom sets a new standard, inspiring circularity in form and function.

 

↳ Learn more

www.variloom.com

Honoree in 2025 Fast Company 
Design by Innovation Awards
Multiple ISPO 2024 Awards

Journ

↳ Challenge

Journ’s founders built a skincare line grounded in natural ingredients, diverse skin-tones, and global inspiration. After finding initial success they prepared to launch a broader range of products and a corresponding product architecture to help their community find the products best suited for their individual needs. Landscape was appointed to help define this product system as well as further express the sustainability, sensory richness, and global stories associated with their products.

 

↳ Opportunity

Translate their philosophy into a brand world as textured and immersive as the formulations themselves. Drawing from the founders’ travels and lived experiences, we crafted an identity system that invites touch, evokes memory, and honors ritual — positioning skincare not as routine, but as a moment worth savoring. A distinct palette distinguishes not only the brand but also the usage of each formulation. Typography evokes both a calligraphic, South Asian influence and a transparent, understated humility – further offering invitation to broadest community.

The system incorporates comprehensive updates beyond the core design system. A tactile packaging approach in rich, earthy tones rewards close attention. An ecommerce website and social presence were designed for sensory, genuine storytelling for both brand messaging and UGC (user generated content) championing Journ’s audience. Journ’s messaging framework is anchored by a single idea — Joy in Ritual — supported by original poetry written for each product in the lineup.

 

↳ Outcome

The system supports a stand out offering and vision with an equally emotive design language and comprehensive attention to detail. Ultimately, Journ’s intentions are mirrored by their current and potential customers’ impressions of the brand.

Gantri + Tombogo

Merging objet d’art with futurist fashion. Launch campaign for Oakland native and Bay Area based designer Tombogo.

As part of our ongoing, integrated Creative Partnership with Gantri.

During Paris Fashion Week, Oakland native and Bay Area based designer Tombogo unveiled the Bag Table Light, an avant-garde creation made in collaboration with Gantri – merging objet d’art with futurist fashion.

For the launch of the Bag Table Light, Landscape worked closed with Tombogo and the team at Gantri to shape a multi-media campaign, working collaboratively to define the Creative Content Strategy, art direction, Content Production, and in-house Photo and Video creation.

Giro

↳ Challenge

Giro is a pioneering force in performance cycling equipment, with a heritage spanning decades of tour wins, breakthrough products, and athlete partnerships with elite teams like Team Visma | Lease a Bike and Canyon//SRAM. Yet in a category increasingly crowded with lifestyle-driven competitors, Giro needed a Spring/Summer ‘25 launch campaign that would reassert its position as the definitive brand for serious cyclists who are consumed by the sport and any available advantage.

 

↳ Opportunity

Working alongside Giro’s leadership, we identified the opportunity to reclaim the brand’s position through elevated storytelling rooted in authenticity—the tangible proof points of an obsession shared by both brand and athletes.

Together, we developed “Artifacts of Obsession,” a flexible campaign system that celebrates the evidence of that shared dedication: storied race wins, unthinkable comebacks, proprietary technology, and an unmistakable design language refined over generations. The narrative framework was designed to integrate real-time team content alongside custom assets we shot and art directed together, allowing Giro to capture the energy of live competition while conveying their distinct designed for sport perspective.

The work spans creative direction, copywriting, photography, and a campaignable system of templates and guidelines utilized globally across social, digital, and physical channels.

 

↳ Outcome

The campaign allowed Giro to transcend a crowded category—positioned not as another equipment maker, but as preeminent ingredient to a shared obsession for cycling.

Henry Gala

↳ Challenge

The Henry is a museum for contemporary art and ideas, grounded in the belief that art has the power to challenge norms, inspire change, and create a more equitable world. Every year, the Henry hosts a fundraising gala in support of their transformative exhibitions and programs that amplify artists’ voices.

 

↳ Opportunity

We partnered with the Henry’s board of directors and gala committee to create the theme and identity for the 2024 Henry Gala.

The theme of Shifting Perspectives was born from the idea that art explores, uncovers, and celebrates new perspectives and viewpoints. The event also coincided with the arrival of the Henry’s new Executive Director, Kris Lewis, signaling a fresh viewpoint at the museum.

To embody the theme, Landscape crafted an identity and experience centered on typographic forms transformed in three-dimensional space, and brought to life with motion. The visual system was applied across printed invitations, social media, and spatial design.

 

↳ Outcome

The event theme and identity helped define an evening celebrating the Henry, and raised hundreds of thousands of dollars supporting the museum’s mission to center art and artists, amplify underrepresented voices, and provide transformative experiences for all.

DOG

DOG is a dynamic project space freely exploring ideas, experiences, imagery, language, connectivity, unknowns. An experimental, physical complement and counterpoint to the branding and creative services work commissioned by Landscape’s clients.

DOG has become a Bay Area cultural staple since its inception as an experimental outlet for the Landscape team. Regular event openings draw between 300 to 700 guests, attracting partnerships with Vimeo and coverage by The San Francisco Chronicle. Crowds often spill into the street outside the space or fill the storied Victoria Theatre entirely.

Programming at DOG is driven by the team’s interests and cultural, social, and technological trends, and reflects the studio’s commitment to nurturing our collective social fabric. Each event [currently E1-E13] explores a distinct topic through an intentional physical experience, serving to connect the local geographic and creative community and embracing all the serendipitous, intimate, and joy-filled opportunities associated with live programming.

The heavy, raw, angular furniture and warm palette, designed in collaboration with Studio AHEAD (recognized by Architectural Digest as one of the New American Voices of the Year), eschews the white-walled gallery and mid-century-clad tropes associated with the majority of established galleries or traditional design studios. This distinct environment invites visitors, exhibitors, and partners to adapt and interact in newer and more unexpected manners, enhancing the uniqueness of each event.

Previous Programming Has Included:

[E5] Issues — An Independent Publishing Retail Pop-Up
[E12] Relate(): AI BONDS — An AI Companionship Panel
[E10] Dark Thoughts — An Independent Horror Film Festival
[E9] Ingredient — An Ecological, Movement-Based Fundraiser
[E11] Black Rodeo — A Photo Exhibit Exploring Black Rodeo Culture

Upcoming Programming Will Feature:

↳ Ecology & Food
↳ Sport & Expression
↳ Experiential Sound Design
↳ Independent Filmmaking
↳ More…

DOG exemplifies the potential of a physical space to engage and support the community, transforming the concept of a creative studio and offering a platform that fosters connection, creativity, and exploration.

To explore more about DOG visit
dogdogdog.xyz

For partnership opportunities & submissions
dog@dogdogdog.xyz

 

Black Rodeo

Black Rodeo is a celebration of Black Americana by photographer Tricia Turner, inspired by the social narratives and history of African-American heritage and cowboys in rodeo culture. Spanning her time traversing California and the Southwest, Turner’s series masterfully captures the lifestyle, traditions, and pride embedded in the legacies of lifelong bull riders, paying homage to trailblazers like Myrtis Dightman, who shattered barriers by competing in the National Finals Rodeo.

As part of our ongoing pro-bono initiative dedicated to empowering Black-owned businesses, Landscape designed a leather-strapped book that blends Tricia’s sophisticated lens on Westerns, history, and fashion—which we had the pleasure of releasing along with an exhibition of her photographs at DOG [E11].

Deconstructing the myth of the American cowboy and negative stereotypes surrounding Black masculinity and fatherhood, Black Rodeo is a visual anthology that looks into the past while documenting what each subject hopes to carry into the future—stylistically referencing the iconic visual tropes and imagery of the American West.

Inspired by this narrative, the book’s large format, expansive layouts, and typography is evocative of the vast American West, captivating viewers with striking portraits. Beyond its black foil stamped cover, we highlight the story of a young cowboy tracing his father’s path, featuring a tipped-in accordion insert, with the addition of leather straps as a nod to rodeo fashion and lasso techniques.

Tricia Turner is a U.S. based advertising and editorial photographer who has worked with esteemed publications and brands such as Vogue Italia, Harper’s Bazaar, The New York Times, Levi’s, and Gap.

Printed by: Edition One in Richmond, CA
Size: 9 x 12 inches
Pages number: 132

RATIO

Beacon Capital Partners is a leading real estate investment firm with a 75-year legacy of purpose-built spaces that facilitate groundbreaking work. We partnered with Beacon to transform the Hollis Business Center into RATIO, an innovation campus centrally located in the heart of Emeryville’s fast-growing life sciences cluster.

Together, we launched a brand identity, digital experience, and signage system that capture the ambitious spirit of the space. The new name, RATIO, is inspired by the perfect mix of people, purpose, and place that define its environment. The same metaphor extends to the brand identity, which features a custom typeface designed to strike a unique balance of scientific rigor and warm humanity. When used in combination with a vibrant color palette and dynamic wordmark, the brand identity reflects RATIO’s appetite for exploration across both physical and digital applications.

We activated the campus itself with the help of Jenny Sharaf, a local artist whose large-scale murals energize RATIO from the inside out. We complemented Jenny’s colorful installations with a robust signage system constructed to effortlessly guide visitors through over 225,000 square feet of modern workspace.

From microscopic moments to global breakthroughs, RATIO is engineered to support ideas that reach far beyond the boundaries of its campus. We look forward to seeing the many positive changes made possible by RATIO’s infrastructure for innovation.

Object Dept.

Object Dept. is an independent jewelry brand with a genderless approach to accessories. Designed to adorn all bodies, the brand blends old and new to inform timeless pieces that define their own legacy.

Shot along the coast of New Zealand, we created an evergreen campaign for Object Dept. that offers an intimate look into the way people interact with jewelry to decorate their lives. Effortlessly relevant and bold in form, the campaign captures iconic silhouettes and strong materials that complement any human canvas.

San Francisco Design Week 2021

Power is everywhere.

It’s local and global, personal and public, selfish and selfless.

There is power in the food we eat, the music we make, and the ideas we share.

Power is a seat at the table, a path forward, and a new beginning.

Torsa Studios

↳ Challenge
Launch Campaign for the New Heights Collection

Shaped by an essential approach to activewear, Torsa is reimagining the way people move through the world. The brand strives to create pieces that embody unobtrusive beauty, a quality defined by a unique balance of simple forms and complex materials. Based in the UK, Torsa approached Landscape to help bring a global perspective to their story and accelerate their growth.

 

↳ Opportunity

Shot in the streets of Oakland, California, we created a campaign that captures the space between performance and play. The imagery showcases Torsa’s iconic uniform against a vibrant backdrop of taco trucks, trail runs, and neighborhood rides. Engineered for everyday life, the collection is designed to move with you.

 

↳ Outcome

The campaign helped broaden Torsa’s international appeal and corresponded with its first wholesale retail accounts—including Selfridges.

NorthPark

How does the modern office keep up with the changing expectations of a younger, creative-class?

A new generation demands a new (and improved) place to work. We partnered with EQ Office, a leading property management company, to reposition, rename, and rebrand one of their flagship Bay Area assets. Previously known as Embarcadero Square, a mixed-use campus on San Francisco’s waterfront, it required a new name and identity to signal a new approach to the modern workspace.

Working through a comprehensive naming process with their senior leadership, we developed a name that signals a relaxed and desirable work atmosphere, surrounded by ample green space in the heart of downtown San Francisco. Welcome to NorthPark, an unexpected urban oasis.

Drawing inspiration from NorthPark’s natural character and distinct location (between thriving Jackson Square, San Francisco’s breezy waterfront, and the bustling Financial District), we positioned the brand to highlight its ideal open space, and unique village-like format and feel; in a word, perfectly off-centered.

A warm and inviting logotype, hand-drawn illustrations, and natural palette create an atmosphere that blends the vibrant energy of the property’s surroundings with an inner sense of calm; a brand that makes space for new connections, ideas, and fast-growing companies.

If you’re in the neighborhood, look for inspiration at NorthPark — 560 Davis Street, in San Francisco.

West Coast Industries

How does one of America’s most established furniture manufacturers position themselves for growth in the digital age?

Designed and made in California, West Coast Industries (WCI) is a respected maker of premium contract furniture. Industry experts in manufacturing custom tables and seating, they boast a client list that includes Hilton, Hyatt, W Hotels, Conde Nast, Twitter, Cisco, SF MoMA, and the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

As part of an ambitious growth strategy, WCI entrusted Landscape to reexamine and reimagine the West Coast Industries’ brand. Over the course 
of a year, we designed a net-new experience to more clearly convey their offering within an increasingly competitive market.

Working closely with their leadership team, we redefined their brand position, messaging, and digital experience. Updated brandmarks, palette, and typography allowed the company to signal their role as a contemporary design partner to a new generation of designers. Bespoke photography, a deep illustration library, and process-focused video expanded the company’s reach across mediums.

Online, we streamlined 
a complex product portfolio into an intuitive information architecture, presenting a simple and confident arrangement supported by warm, custom content that improved the emotional connection with 
their customers. Additionally, the site offers a range of unique functionality to expedite the specification and ordering process for both designers and WCI’s customer service team.

As a result, WCI registered a double-digit percentage increase in critical sales shortly 
after the launch, while remaining true to the values that have shaped 
its legacy.

Visit westcoastindustries.com

DreamOre

The hour between wolf and dog.

In French, “entre chien et loup,” designates the periods of day that are between light and dark—the purple dusking passage and the grey-orange of the day-gleam dawn. The prevalent interpretation of the idiom seems to be that, during these oddly lit hours, a wolf could be mistaken for a dog.

Landscape collaborated with artist Hunter Longe and Norwegen publisher Coda Press to design a book of drawings, dream transcriptions, and poems written during the full moon. The design echoes the many conceptual threads found within the artist’s work, introducing juxtapositions and layering created across a palette of thoughts—nonbinary and unbound by time, a place to experience the in-betweens.

“For me, drawing, poetry, and dreaming can act as divinatory tools to navigate slippery times. They follow a kind of non-logic, a random function of a quick non-sequitur that gets at the churning unpredictability and true weirdness of existence underlying the thin layer of pattern and structure to which we tend to attach so much importance. In poems and drawings, as in dreams, we hone back on deep instincts and intuitions that have been sequestered by striving for the lie that is reason.”

DreamOre (© 2021) is published by Coda Press in Bergen, with the support of Kulturrådet Arts Council Norway, Norske Billedkunstnere, and Bergen Kommune.

Buy → DreamOre from Coda Press

Atoms

Propelled by the belief that great design inspires you to be and do better, Atoms set out to create the ideal shoes for everyday wear. Building upon rave reviews from early customers and a growing waitlist, Atoms’ founders came to us looking to better articulate their brand and scale their business.

Working in partnership, we codified a concise brand expression and translated it into a thoughtful, premium, end-to-end customer journey. The engagement included rethinking a new e-commerce website, rich content creation, a bespoke packaging experience, and a comprehensive collateral system. The evolved brand positions Atoms as a highly versatile tool for curiosity, creativity, experimentation, and new experiences.

More to come as the brand continues to roll out.

Obliq

Shifting rituals through beautiful, premium products, Obliq is an elevated cannabis experience. Landscape was commissioned to define the entire brand, from naming to identity to packaging to digital.

An altered perception requires an expanded palette. A deceptively simple visual system extends a deeply considered product experience; the unvarnished, shape-shifting identity brings Obliq to life. Five letters, five fingers, five senses — Obliq signals a new direction in cannabis.

Stay tuned for updates. Obliq is coming soon.

The Sedona Bag

The Sedona Bag, inspired by our trip to the Southwest in search of sun, solitude, and transformation.

Limited Run
Made from Heavy-Weight 65% Recycled Canvas
Printed in San Francisco
Designed with Love
$45 + Shipping

Buy Now

Claxton Projects

Claxton Projects is a New York-based artist management company, representing a group of exceptional, international photo-based artists. Exploring and cultivating the convergence of art and commerce, the company promotes and celebrates challenging, intelligent, and creative photography.

Tom Claxton approached Landscape to craft an identity and website with a distinct perspective that would captivate and provoke audiences in the commercial and art worlds alike. The visual language needed to be smart, sophisticated, and minimal — a canvas for a diverse roster and rich storytelling — allowing the quality of the artists’ work to take the forefront.

Mission Critical

Essential Gear for Extraordinary Dads™

Young dads want to play a more active role in raising their kids. They deeply value tools that let them explore new outdoors experiences while sharing unique bonding moments with their loved ones. However, within the parenting marketplace, there are very few brands that offer high-quality products designed specifically for dads. One of the few brands that has recognized this need is Mission Critical, maker of modular, rugged baby carriers designed specifically for men.

After three years of rapid, organic growth as a direct to consumer brand, their team aimed to expand the brand’s customer base with a new product line and enlisted Landscape to help connect more dads more deeply to their kids.

In-depth customer research and refined strategic positioning enabled our team to craft a brand identity system rooted in essentialism and an appreciation for exploring the unknown (both in nature and in life). The updated identity system allowed the brand to transcend its’ successful but polarizing tactical image, becoming a more inclusive and progressive articulation of fatherhood.

Included in the engagement was a complete overhaul of the brand’s messaging platform and taxonomy for its expanding portfolio of products. We positioned the product lines as complementary systems with precise value propositions, clarified accessory bundling, and renamed their expanded product line.

Every aspect of the evolved brand experience was shaped to support the updated strategy, including: an adaptive Shopify e-commerce website, a full lineup of new marketing materials, packaging, and a deep content library to support ongoing digital growth marketing.

Samovar

Already positioned as an authority within the tea community, Samovar approached Landscape to more clearly articulate their brand vision and craft an extensible platform upon which they could further grow their business.

The in-depth identity update shifted Samovar away from the stereotypical visions of traditional tea culture, towards a more purposeful, utilitarian, and approachable experience. The strategy focused on communicating the quality of their tea without pretense or affect, thereby broadening Samovar’s appeal to those less familiar with drinking tea.

The partnership included the redefinition of virtually all of Samovar’s touchpoints — brand identity and guidelines, packaging, collateral, service design, and interior design in collaboration with their architectural team.

The work has been featured by Dwell, Wallpaper*, San Francisco Chronicle, California Home & Design, and Fast Company.

Samovar has since grown their business to include three new locations in San Francisco, including the international terminal at SFO and highly desirable locations on Valencia Street and Fillmore Street.

Mirra

Mirra is a SaaS 3D content creation platform. The platform’s systematic approach to design allows for the simple creation and distribution of beautiful, resonant, and immersive VR / AR / XR experiences. Design in your browser, export to almost any headset, no code required.

With the aim to foster a vibrant community centered around immersive media, Kevin Farnham, founder of the renowned innovation design studio Method, approached Landscape to help shepherd his newest venture into reality.

The project began with the definition of a taxonomy for describing interactions in 3D space, included naming and identity design, and culminated in a product that likely represents a first look at a class of tools that will become fundamental (and perhaps shape) the design profession.

Minus-8

As though derived from an unknown point in the future, Minus-8 embodies the confluence of tradition and disruption. Pairing proven technologies such as Japanese movement and PVD coatings with space age details, Minus-8 subverts trends and defies categorization.

Landscape worked with the Minus-8 team to refine the brand’s identity as well as design their flagship touchpoints.

To develop a digital showcase worthy of its watches, Landscape designed a responsive e-commerce experience that provokes boundaries both technically, and aesthetically. By pushing the Magento platform into an experimental realm, we created an interface that facilitates a compelling shopping experience, and a futuristic brand story.

With pristine details and confident styling, each timepiece is an engineered work of art. By creating a catalog with the same characteristics, Landscape extended the Minus-8 design language into a hermetically sealed expression of the brand. Utilizing a unique combination of substrates and processes, each catalog is intended to create a personal and multi-sensory experience for the viewer.

Much like the watches themselves, each Minus-8 experience appears to have been created in some sort of future laboratory. Equal parts elegant, industrial, and architectural, the results are focused experiences, each truly in a class by itself.

Van Acker

Van Acker Construction Associates, one of the most sought after private construction companies on the west coast, represents the intersection of design, development and execution. Since 1987, the practice has successfully taken on ambitious and complex projects, delivering the highest level of general contracting and construction management services for over 20 years.

The complete identity update included all formal identity elements, printed collateral, physical site signage, and a redesigned marketing website. A clearly differentiated design strategy communicates the equally distinct service offering Van Acker provides. Additionally, the brand experience reflects the level of consideration, sophistication, and rigor that Van Acker maintains across every facet of their business.

To protect the privacy of its clientele, Van Acker’s digital portfolio focuses on architectural details. This approach circumvented the challenge of divulging too much information about the locations of the buildings and also offered the opportunity to showcase Van Acker’s craftsmanship.

Intel x Olympics

Intel is reimagining the future of the Olympic Games with leading-edge technologies like virtual reality, 5G, and drone light shows. For the 2018 Olympic games in PyeongChang, Landscape collaborated with the brand team at Intel to create the visual identity system and guidelines for all touchpoints of the Intel Olympics worldwide partnership.

Brian Longe

Painter Brian Longe returned after a twenty-year hiatus from exhibiting, during which time he lived in the Sierras, intensely studying the mountain topography and raising a family. “The Source” a solo exhibition at The Luggage Store in San Francisco, marked the culmination of his research in the form of mural-size geographic abstractions.

Landscape worked with Brian to produce photography, video, and show collateral, as well as an editioned, 84-page catalog.

The design of the catalog is structured into two distinct sections, denoted by a shift in both material and layout. The initial section places Brian’s work within the context of his peers and art history, including work by Picasso, Joan Miro, Ana Mendieta, and Jackson Pollock. The layout, bespoke on a page-by-page basis, embraces the fluidity and spontaneity of Brian’s own work. The latter section of the book presents Brian’s work to the viewer at a scale that embraces the boundaries of the printed piece and acknowledges the massive scale of the work. A gallery-like layout and a gesture that invites the reader to view the work as large as possible, though still a fraction of actual size.