I stumbled across the Daily Logo Challenge during a period when I wanted to sharpen my logo design muscles and have a little fun with it. The idea was simple: receive a prompt each day and design a logo around it. At first, I thought the prompts were randomized indefinitely. When I later found out they were actually fixed—a set 1 to 50—I kind of lost steam. I stopped at Day 18, but it was still a fun ride and an experimental playground for visual puns, cultural nods, and a few personal touches. That said, this doesn’t mean I’m done for good—I think I’m just waiting for the right time to pick it up again.

Throughout most of the challenge, my process was to create a brand that’s a creative combination of separate ideas, often involving a pun or a play on words. It was my way of building something clever and memorable from unexpected pairings.
- Rocket: Rocket x Raket, with raket as a Filipino slang for side gigs
- Hot Air Balloon: Balloon x Circle, making a silhouette of the sun and the hot air balloon in between 2 mountains
- Panda: Panda x Blacksmith, or panday in Tagalog
- Monogram: A stylized S for my wife based on my Infinity Chain logo.
- Driverless Car: Auto / Oto x Wifi
- Coffee: Coffee x Photocopy, a cafe that doubles as a photocopying service provider
- Clothing Brand: A faux Japanese brand using Filipino words uso ‘to, that means “this is trendy”
- Ski Resort: M x Skiblades
- Streaming App: Stream (as both a body of water and relating to music), branded with the term saliw, meaning accompaniment, like in music or poetry
- Campfire: Stylized visualization where the light rays form the actual logo
- Daily Logo Challenge: A simple typographical arrangement as a logo
- Airlines: Gora (Filipino slang for go)
- Barber: Bar x Barber
- Cloud: Brain x Cloud
- Handmade: A handdrawn logo
- Fox: Simple geometric visualization
- Typeface: Geometric letters
- Cupcake: For my friend’s cupcake business: @keykeyk923
Reflection
Though I didn’t finish all 50 days, this short sprint taught me a lot. It forced rapid ideation, reduced overthinking, and opened space for experimentation. Plus, who doesn’t love logos with puns?