by abduzeedo
John John Dias built the Glossai children's branding around a single move: a triangular yellow mark that frames each child's face. Sharp, credible, warm.
The mark is a rounded triangle. Three corners softened into arcs. A circular void sits at the center. It frames children's faces in every application — business cards, app screens, outdoor signage. The same crop. Every time. The color system is three things: acid yellow, black, and white. No gradients. No pastels. The yellow lands as confident, not playful. It sits flat against black in the typographic poster "Glossai Means Superior Being." It carries the same weight on a real JCDecaux outdoor display reading "Education that Inspires. Children that Transform." The children's branding never softens the palette for its audience. That decision is the point. The wordmark uses a rounded sans-serif. The terminals match the corners of the mark. That shared geometry makes the system feel designed rather than assembled. John John Dias applied children's branding across app interfaces, print collateral, event environments, and physical spaces built for children. The system spans a lot of surfaces. The mark holds on all of them.
Glossai Children's Branding: One Mark, Every Surface






Glossai is an educational platform for children. The brief came from Howard Gardner's Multiple Intelligences theory — the idea that intelligence takes many forms. The children's branding had to hold that complexity without showing it. One yellow mark. One weight of type. No second colors. No illustrative characters. No softening tricks. The triangular shape reappears everywhere without explaining itself. It earned a Best of Behance placement in January 2026. That recognition is earned. The system works on a classroom wall, a tote bag, a phone screen, a building facade, and a playground without any adjustment. The scatter of printed pieces says it before you read a word. That is the real test for any children's branding: survive every surface without losing the plot.