December 20, 2011

This is the hands-down worst logo (the top one) ever designed and used, of any company worth over $100 million. The name RE/MAX is derived from “real estate maximum” and is one of the most successful franchises on the planet. 63 countries, 6 continents, 100,000 sales associates, 6900 offices. It’s huge. It’s everywhere. Let’s look at it more closely:
DESIGN
This is one of those “my nephew just started highschool but he’s a really good artist” kinda deals. The slash is unnecessary and the demand for RE/MAX to be written in uppercase makes it even more grotesque. This is a case of years of numbing familiarity. But look at it with a new eye. I’m placing all my cards face up on the table and claiming that there is no hidden FedEx-style arrow. No secret, witty meaning or form within. Just lousy design produced at a moment when it just didn’t really matter. Kudos, however, for not changing is as many times as Gateway or a southern-based NHL team.
KERNING
At the time of this logo’s cesarean, tight kerning was the norm. The “RE” combination then is perfect. A slight ligature at the bottom of the “R” connecting the “E” is dead on. The “MA” combination is far too tight in relation to the “AX,” however, as straight-to-straights should be the furthest spaced combos. And the “EM” is a crapshoot, and the little bit of “E” after the slash is just awkward and sloppy.
LETTERFORMS
Essentially, it’s the more evil characters in the Avant Garde font family, and the design is true to the sorts of wordmark designs produced using these Avant Garde special cuts. Like how a certain German Leader (name withheld because I don’t want those search hits) wrecked that small mustache for despots everywhere, RE/MAX shelved Avant Garde for designers for all time.
RATIONALE
There isn’t any. Can’t be.
RE/MAX RE/DESIGN
So, how do you reanimate such a beast, without losing the obvious familiarity that’s kept it alive this long? Above, I opened up the kerning to a more contemporary spacing, ditched the whack Avant Garde characters, and repurposed the slash. Not as much…(zing?)…as the original, but perhaps easier to work with, and it refocuses the name, which is still great.