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The story behind our letter A

Designer Rasmus Snabb thought he had created just a simple logo, yet it managed to cause a complicated tangle.
Rasmus Snabb A-kirjaimen edess盲, kuva: Mikko Raskinen
鈥業mmediately after the competition-winning logo was published, the Aalto community started making its own versions of it. Even though they were doing it jokingly, I felt that people wanted to make the logo their own,鈥 Rasmus Snabb says.

He came up with it at a playground. His two-year-old daughter Frida was tirelessly climbing up the stairs of a slide only to slide right down again, and Rasmus Snabb was thinking he needed an idea that was as simple as possible. 

After they got back home, Snabb drew his contest entry, wrote down its reasoning and mailed them for consideration by the jury of Aalto University鈥檚 logo design competition. The deadline for submissions was fast approaching, but his entry got there on time.

Rasmus Snabb鈥檚 Invitation was named the winner in May 2009. 

Quotation mark

鈥業 was living and working in Denmark at the time, and only heard about the competition one week before the deadline. There was no time to fine-tune a solution, I needed to focus on coming up with a strong idea,鈥 Snabb says now, 11 years after the competition.

Aalto University Foundation arranged an open design competition for the new university鈥檚 logo. In all, 117 submissions were received.

鈥業 didn鈥檛 really think that I might win, I only wanted to communicate to President Tuula Teeri what kind of university I would like to be building.鈥

Snabb became familiar with the turmoil and resistance surrounding the founding of Aalto when he studied graphic design at the University of Art and Design Helsinki.

鈥業n my comments, I said that the students in particular don鈥檛 want historical or heraldic coats of arms, lions or innovation squiggles, preferring openness and freedom instead. We wanted a new kind of university, somewhere that allows you to influence things yourself. A place that permits curiosity and getting called into question.鈥

Aalto University logo by Rasmus Snabb
The original logo proposal designed by Rasmus Snabb.

Exclamation mark

Snabb鈥檚 logo spelled out Aalto University, but included an exclamation mark, a question mark and a quotation mark among the letters. 

鈥楾his caused a brouhaha both in Finland and internationally: a university plans to adopt such a logo, they must be crazy! To top it all off, some German graphic artist found a similar visualisation online. It had been made for a small-circle typography seminar and wasn鈥檛 visibly present anywhere else. I wouldn鈥檛 have even known where to pinch it from.鈥

Because of the alleged plagiarism, a decision was made to edit the proposal 鈥 thankfully, says Snabb. He thinks the original submission would have been awkward in practical application.

He drafted a new, simplified version, where the letter A stands beside the name of the University followed by one of three optional punctuation marks. This logo remains in use, though it has been subtly altered over the years by, for example, discontinuing the use of coloured logo versions.

Question mark

During the early years of Aalto, freelance designer Rasmus Snabb was also responsible for the University鈥檚 visual appearance more broadly. He thinks that, ideally, the appearance forms its own visual language, a tool users can utilise in a manner characteristic to themselves. It needn鈥檛 be a sacred, unchanging thing.

鈥楾he logo could even be so free-form that users are permitted to choose any symbol to stand beside the letter A, a skull, for example. But I doubt the University鈥檚 branding will let loose to that extent,鈥 says Snabb.

He believes Aalto鈥檚 distinct and powerful logo is now a source of pride for the University.

Nowadays, Rasmus Snabb is Head of Design and a partner at communications and influencing consultancy Miltton Group. Snabb was pictured in the lobby of the main building of Aalto, Dipoli, which houses a neon sign version of the University鈥檚 logo. Photo: Mikko Raskinen.

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