by jeff
Yokō is a matcha bar branding project by Elen Chris that trades Japanese minimalism for bold color, flat illustration, and type that earns a second look.
The concept behind Yokō sits on a specific tension: a Japanese matcha café built for people who move fast through cities but still want to pause. That is a real behavioral brief. It shapes every design decision here. The brand does not lean on zen clichés or muted earth tones. Instead, Elen Chris reaches for something louder and more confrontational.
The wordmark does a lot of work. Yokō is set in a bold, rounded sans-serif. The macron over the final o is kept intact, a small typographic choice that signals cultural respect without turning the mark into a pastiche. Below the wordmark, Japanese kanji for matcha café sits at a smaller scale next to the English translation. The bilingual lockup reads cleanly for anyone familiar with the script or not.
Matcha Bar Branding That Earns Its Color Palette
Three colors anchor the system: deep olive-green, coral-pink, and pale chartreuse yellow-green. These are not safe choices for food branding. But the system commits to them fully. The logo inverts cleanly across all three backgrounds. The same palette carries through the menu design, illustrated sticker icons, cup sleeves, and takeaway bags. A set of hand-drawn flat icons featuring the chasen whisk, matcha bowls, and leaf forms adds warmth without softening the overall confidence. Street-facing poster mockups confirm the palette holds at scale. This is matcha bar branding built to hold attention on a busy city block.




