by abduzeedo
Sendtip branding identity by Segun Bamidele pairs an upward logomark, Gen-Z colors, SF Pro type, and bold geometric patterns for a joyful creator design.
The creator economy runs on connection — between audiences and the people who make things for them. Sendtip, a digital tipping platform for creators, needed a visual language that matched that energy. Lagos and Leeds-based designer Segun Bamidele built the Sendtip branding identity from the ground up, producing a system that is fast, legible, and culturally attuned to its Gen-Z target audience.
The brief called for something that felt immediate — the act of sending value quickly and with joy. Bamidele answered that with a logomark built around a single clean upward form. The shape reads as motion and generosity in the same gesture. Embedded within it, a subtle beak-like detail hints at expression and creator voice. It is a compact mark that holds both the product's function and its personality without overloading either.
Branding Identity Built for a Gen-Z Creator Platform
Typography throughout the Sendtip branding identity uses SF Pro exclusively, applied consistently across headers and body copy. The choice reflects a studied restraint: SF Pro sits at the intersection of contemporary and professional, carrying weight and clarity without visual noise. For a platform built around quick financial exchanges, that legibility matters. The type never competes with the brand's more expressive elements — it grounds them.
Color is where the system finds its energy. The palette lands firmly in Gen-Z aesthetic territory: high-saturation hues balanced against more controlled accents. The combination reads as vibrant and culturally aware without tipping into garish. These are colors that perform well in digital environments — on screen, in motion, across social formats — which is exactly the context where Sendtip lives.
The pattern system is where the branding identity earns its depth. Bamidele built it directly from the logomark geometry, expanding the core shape into a repeating structure that carries cultural rhythm and movement. Each block within the pattern holds its own visual identity, yet the overall composition reads as unified. There is a deliberate diversity in the arrangement — different colors, proportions, and densities — that reflects the creator community the platform serves.
The Sendtip branding identity extends beyond screen into physical goods: caps, beanies, and apparel carry the logomark and pattern into real-world culture. The merch applies the mark with restraint — logomark on neutral fabrics, pattern details as accents — so the pieces feel wearable rather than promotional. Outdoor applications take the opposite approach, scaling the typography and color to billboard proportions where bold, high-contrast statements communicate the platform's core idea at distance and speed.
What Bamidele has produced is a branding identity that understands its audience. It does not borrow design conventions from legacy fintech. Instead it speaks the visual language of digital creators — expressive, fast, generous — and builds a consistent system around that language from logo to merch to billboard.




