A
B
Blackline
Campaign Direction
2026
Reduced to a cleaner and more exact visual language, the new direction gives Blackline stronger definition and a more memorable edge.
Overview
This project called for a stronger visual language that could carry a clear point of view without falling into noise. The goal was to create a direction that feels bold, immediate, and easy to recognize, while still leaving enough flexibility for different formats, launches, and supporting content.
Challenge
The visual foundation was there, but the overall execution lacked consistency and a clear sense of hierarchy. Some assets felt too aggressive, others too neutral, and together they did not form a strong or unified impression. The challenge was to bring more control, rhythm, and intention to the work without losing the energy that made it stand out in the first place.
Our Approach
The system was built around contrast, pacing, and repetition. Strong typographic moments, tighter composition rules, and a more deliberate use of scale helped shape a visual direction that could work across hero images, social assets, posters, motion, and launch materials. Instead of adding more, the focus was on making fewer decisions feel sharper, stronger, and more intentional.
Outcome
The final direction created a more recognizable and cohesive visual presence across 21 delivered assets completed in 4 weeks. The result feels sharper, more controlled, and much easier to carry across different touchpoints, while leaving enough flexibility for future campaigns, updates, and new content.
Jonas Richter (Creative Direction)
Clara Neumann (Brand Design)
Mia Fischer (Copywriting)
“There’s a level of precision to the project now that simply wasn’t there before. It feels cleaner, stronger, and much easier to recognize.”

Daniel Moore,
Brand Director


Next project
A more composed digital stage for the work, shaped through rhythm, restraint, and cleaner framing.
Campaign Direction
2026
Blackline
Reduced to a cleaner and more exact visual language, the new direction gives Blackline stronger definition and a more memorable edge.
Overview
This project called for a stronger visual language that could carry a clear point of view without falling into noise. The goal was to create a direction that feels bold, immediate, and easy to recognize, while still leaving enough flexibility for different formats, launches, and supporting content.
Challenge
The visual foundation was there, but the overall execution lacked consistency and a clear sense of hierarchy. Some assets felt too aggressive, others too neutral, and together they did not form a strong or unified impression. The challenge was to bring more control, rhythm, and intention to the work without losing the energy that made it stand out in the first place.
Our Approach
The system was built around contrast, pacing, and repetition. Strong typographic moments, tighter composition rules, and a more deliberate use of scale helped shape a visual direction that could work across hero images, social assets, posters, motion, and launch materials. Instead of adding more, the focus was on making fewer decisions feel sharper, stronger, and more intentional.
Outcome
The final direction created a more recognizable and cohesive visual presence across 21 delivered assets completed in 4 weeks. The result feels sharper, more controlled, and much easier to carry across different touchpoints, while leaving enough flexibility for future campaigns, updates, and new content.
Jonas Richter (Creative Direction)
Clara Neumann (Brand Design)
Mia Fischer (Copywriting)


“There’s a level of precision to the project now that simply wasn’t there before. It feels cleaner, stronger, and much easier to recognize.”

Daniel Moore,
Brand Director
Next project
A more composed digital stage for the work, shaped through rhythm, restraint, and cleaner framing.
A colder, cleaner visual language that gives the project more precision, tension, and recall.
Campaign Direction
2026
Blackline
Reduced to a cleaner and more exact visual language, the new direction gives Blackline stronger definition and a more memorable edge.
Overview
This project called for a stronger visual language that could carry a clear point of view without falling into noise. The goal was to create a direction that feels bold, immediate, and easy to recognize, while still leaving enough flexibility for different formats, launches, and supporting content.
Challenge
The visual foundation was there, but the overall execution lacked consistency and a clear sense of hierarchy. Some assets felt too aggressive, others too neutral, and together they did not form a strong or unified impression. The challenge was to bring more control, rhythm, and intention to the work without losing the energy that made it stand out in the first place.
Our Approach
The system was built around contrast, pacing, and repetition. Strong typographic moments, tighter composition rules, and a more deliberate use of scale helped shape a visual direction that could work across hero images, social assets, posters, motion, and launch materials. Instead of adding more, the focus was on making fewer decisions feel sharper, stronger, and more intentional.
Outcome
The final direction created a more recognizable and cohesive visual presence across 21 delivered assets completed in 4 weeks. The result feels sharper, more controlled, and much easier to carry across different touchpoints, while leaving enough flexibility for future campaigns, updates, and new content.
Jonas Richter (Creative Direction)
Clara Neumann (Brand Design)
Mia Fischer (Copywriting)


“There’s a level of precision to the project now that simply wasn’t there before. It feels cleaner, stronger, and much easier to recognize.”

Daniel Moore,
Brand Director
Next project
A more composed digital stage for the work, shaped through rhythm, restraint, and cleaner framing.