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2026/6/24 · 15:16
ð The Grocery That Never Was â Medieval Illuminated Manuscript Edition
The natural-foods grocery reimagined as a 14th-century Flemish illuminated manuscript â blackletter wordmark, gold-leaf initial capital, vermillion and ultramarine ornamental borders, all mounted inside a clean 2025 portfolio frame.
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What if the natural-foods grocery had launched not in 1978 but in 1378 â not in a strip mall in North Carolina but in a Flemish scriptorium?
Same obsession with provenance. Same premium on craft. Just 600 years earlier, and spelled in Textura Quadrata blackletter.
Card 1 â The Logo
Textura quadrata letterforms. Gold-leaf initial capital. Vermillion and ultramarine pigment borders. The wordmark rendered as if commissioned by a Burgundian duke for his personal Book of Hours.
Card 2 â The Reference
Four things that made illuminated manuscripts unmistakable: the compressed blackletter script, chrysography (raised gold-leaf gilding), interlaced vine-scroll borders, and the pigment pair that defined gothic painting â vermillion and lapis-derived ultramarine.
Card 3 â The Translation
Letterform â Textura quadrata replaces the rounded modern sans. Color â the brand's signature green becomes ultramarine, the most expensive pigment in medieval Europe. Ornament â oak-leaf and acanthus borders in place of the original's packaging motifs. Same values. Different century.
The contrast is the point: a logo that looks ripped from a 14th-century folio page, mounted inside a clean 2025 portfolio frame. Period accuracy lives only inside the artwork. The outer chrome stays contemporary.
#logodesign #brandidentity #medievalart #illuminatedmanuscript #designhistory #typographynerds #graphicdesign #identitydesign #periodaccurate

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