Adams Design

Adams Design Adams Design is a Boston-based brand identity and placemaking studio helping organizations reposition, differentiate, and define destination.

Our work encompasses graphics and brand identity, website design and digital experiences, advertising and communications. We believe that great design cannot happen without passion, intelligence and personal commitment, and is demonstrated by a portfolio that spans 3 decades and a variety of industries.

Lately, I've been thinking more about the difference between premium and luxury in branding.They can look similar on the...
05/19/2026

Lately, I've been thinking more about the difference between premium and luxury in branding.

They can look similar on the surface, but they communicate very different things.

Luxury branding has traditionally relied on signals of exclusivity, aspiration, and perfection.

But many of the strongest premium brands today are building connection in a different way. Through clarity, warmth, intelligence, responsiveness, and emotional ease.

That shift changes the design conversation.
The visual language becomes softer.
The messaging becomes more human.
The experience becomes less about status and more about care.

We recently began work for a concierge pediatric practice, and it reinforced this idea immediately. No one wants a child’s healthcare experience to feel luxurious in the traditional sense.

They want it to feel calm. Thoughtful. Personal.

The most effective premium brands today are often the ones that understand emotion, not just aspiration.

Newbury Street:A district-wide rebrand unifying Newbury Street’s fashion, retail, dining, and cultural destinations under one cohesive identity.

The Gaila Fund: A brand identity and messaging system for a nonprofit redefining beauty and self-expression for women navigating cancer.

Vivo Apartments: A residential identity translating the culture of Kendall Square into a more human, connected, and internationally minded living experience.

Seaport Hotel: A waterfront hotel identity that reinterprets Boston’s maritime language for a contemporary hospitality experience.

Learn more at www.adamsdesignboston.com

We make you look twice.And then we make sure you don't forget it.At Adams Design, the brands we build aren't the loudest...
05/07/2026

We make you look twice.
And then we make sure you don't forget it.

At Adams Design, the brands we build aren't the loudest in the room. They're the ones with the clearest story. That story starts with strategy, not a moodboard. Once the idea is clear, everything we create has a purpose.

Most stone fabricators show you the slab. We built a fairytale around it.

Using the CUMAR Marble and Granite children as models, each slab became a stage, each image a different story. It won awards. It drove new business. And it gave an eighth-generation company a brand worthy of the next eight.

Most real estate agents look like every other real estate agent. Emma Guardia doesn't.

We built her brand around a single bold idea: the letter E, architectural, reductive, designed for street scale. Then we created fashion editorial portraits that were conceptual, fun, and completely unexpected for a real estate agent.

For The Bristol Wellesley, the story was simple: life gets better when it gets easier.

A beautiful home in the town they loved, without the weight of a large property. We built the brand around that feeling. Life Made Easy. The imagery, photographed with a fashion editorial feel, made ease look like the most elegant choice you could make.

Battery Wharf Residences was sitting on one of Boston's most extraordinary addresses and nobody knew it. It didn't need more amenities. It needed a story. We gave it one: Wonderfully European, comparing the site to world renowned resort cities. The campaign didn't sell condos, It sold the feeling of living somewhere that felt nothing like Boston.

Great visual storytelling isn't made. It's built. From the inside out.

Learn more about our brand identity and branding at www.adamsdesignboston.com

Cumar, Emma and Battery Wharf photographed by Stephen Sherman Photography Boston
The Bristol photographed by Bob Packert - Visual Artist

Safe branding is expensive. Stay within the category. Don’t push too far. But what you gain in comfort, you lose in dist...
04/21/2026

Safe branding is expensive. Stay within the category. Don’t push too far.

But what you gain in comfort, you lose in distinction.

When everyone is using the same symbols, the same colors, the same language, you don’t look established. You look interchangeable.

And interchangeable brands don’t get chosen. They get compared.

That’s the cost of playing it safe.

The real risk isn’t standing out.
It’s disappearing into a sea of sameness.

The work only works when it takes a position.

Work shown: Echelon Seaport (Cottonwood Group, The Collaborative Companies), Belclare Wellesley (The Noannet Group, The Collaborative Companies), Penmark (RF Walsh, Otis & Ahearn), Sensing Restaurant (Fairmont Hotels & Resorts, Kortenhaus Communications, Otis & Ahearn)

Learn more about these projects and others at www.adamsdesignboston.com

The first thing most clients tell me is what they want the logo to look like.Before we've talked about what they do diff...
04/17/2026

The first thing most clients tell me is what they want the logo to look like.

Before we've talked about what they do differently. Before we know who they're actually talking to. Before there's anything to say.

And I always think the same thing: how can you tell me what it should look like before you know what it should say?

A logo that starts with aesthetics is working backwards. It ends up carrying weight it was never built for. Explaining things. Justifying things. Doing the job that strategy was supposed to do.

The strongest identities I've worked on started with a point of view, not a Pinterest board.

When the idea is clear, the logo almost designs itself.

A few examples where we figured out what to say first.

The Cape Club, Liberty Wharf, Stratus Residences

See more about these projects at www.adamsdesignboston.com

Most brand identity work isn’t about designing a logo.It’s about resolving tension.One brand, multiple audiences.Differe...
04/09/2026

Most brand identity work isn’t about designing a logo.
It’s about resolving tension.

One brand, multiple audiences.
Different expectations. Different ways of seeing the same thing.

Make everything consistent, and it loses meaning.
Push too far apart, and it loses cohesion.

That’s the challenge.

I approach it as a system, not a single mark.

A shared structure underneath.
Proportion, geometry, rhythm.

Then the expression shifts.
Tone changes. Energy changes. Audience changes.

But the foundation holds.

That’s what allows a brand to expand without losing its identity.

It’s an approach I’ve used on projects like The Sudbury, in collaboration with The HYM Investment Group, LLC and The Collaborative Companies.

Explore these projects at adamsdesignboston.com

Brenda Adams and the team at Adams Design developed the identity and logos for Makor Capital and Makor Management. The c...
04/03/2026

Brenda Adams and the team at Adams Design developed the identity and logos for Makor Capital and Makor Management. The companies required a unified brand system that could clearly articulate distinct roles within the same organization.

Makor Capital leads investment strategy and capital deployment. Makor Management oversees operations, tenant experience, and long-term asset performance. The identity needed to express a shared foundation while making each function immediately legible.

The challenge was systemic, not decorative.

We designed a single, recognizable mark built to do more than identify. It needed to carry the brand across multiple entities, properties, and future growth without losing clarity or structure.

At the center is a core geometric form that acts as both signature and framework. A mark with range. It reinforces recognition, but more importantly, it creates a visual language that can expand, adapt, and hold together as the portfolio evolves.

Typography and color establish hierarchy across the system. Makor Capital, Makor Management, and individual properties each take on a distinct position, while remaining part of a cohesive whole.

The result is an identity that works as a family. Consistent, flexible, and built to extend well beyond a single application.

To learn more about this project: www.adamsdesignboston.com

The success of an adaptive reuse project starts with how it’s positioned.Brenda Adams and the team at Adams Design creat...
03/30/2026

The success of an adaptive reuse project starts with how it’s positioned.

Brenda Adams and the team at Adams Design created the brand identity for Appleton Mills, a 1909 textile mill in Lowell reimagined as homes for working artists, developed by Trinity Financial, Inc.

The challenge was not just repositioning a building. It was defining its next life.
We shifted the narrative from industrial production to creative production. From factory to community.

The identity draws from the logic of the mill itself. Pattern. Rhythm. Structure. Historic textile systems translated into a contemporary brand language that feels grounded, not applied.

We also brought local residents into the process. Local artists contributed original photography, layered with archival materials to create a visual language grounded in place and authenticity.

Live Creatively became the organizing idea, connecting the building, the audience, and the experience.

For developers, the question is not what the building was.
It is what it becomes.

Position it clearly
Define the audience
Make the idea visible

That is what drives leasing.

Learn more about this project adamsdesignboston.com

There’s no building yet.No finished spaces. No lived experience to point to.Just a site, a plan, and a decision someone ...
03/25/2026

There’s no building yet.
No finished spaces. No lived experience to point to.

Just a site, a plan, and a decision someone has to make.

That’s when the brand matters most.

Because you’re not marketing what is.
You’re shaping what people believe it will be.

At Adams Design, we start with positioning.

What does this address mean?
Who is it for, and
what does it say about them?

Before any visuals, the idea has to be clear.

Then we build a visual language that carries across every touchpoint.
Identity, campaigns, brochures, digital, signage.

Each piece reinforcing the same idea, in different ways.

From Echelon Seaport, developed by Cottonwood Group in partnership with The Collaborative Companies to The Bristol Wellesley with The Collaborative Companies, Belclare Wellesley with The Noannet Group and The Collaborative Companies, One Harbor Shore with The Fallon Company and The Collaborative Companies, Stratus Residences with JD Advisors Inc and Cabot, Cabot & Forbes, The Sudbury Residences with The HYM Investment Group, LLC and The Collaborative Companies, One Canal Apartments with Trinity Financial, Inc., the goal is the same.

To create a brand that feels fully formed before the building ever is.

So when someone encounters the project, they don’t question it.
They understand it.

And more importantly, they see themselves in it.

That’s how momentum begins long before construction is complete.
And why the right brand can shape the success of a development before it’s even built.

To learn more about these and other similar projects, please visit our website: adamsdesignboston.com

One of the things I’ve always loved most about branding is the challenge of designing the logo.Early in the planning of ...
03/20/2026

One of the things I’ve always loved most about branding is the challenge of designing the logo.

Early in the planning of The Cape Club, a mixed-use residential and golf community on Cape Cod, Brenda Adams and the team at Adams Design developed an identity concept for the project as it was first being introduced.

The logo became the starting point for the brand thinking.

Inspired by the sculpted forms found throughout the course, the mark abstracts the shape of a golf bunker into a simple geometric figure. Within that form, the negative space resolves into a subtle “C,” referencing both the club’s name and the experience of the course itself.

Rather than relying on traditional country-club symbols, the concept drew directly from the physical landscape of the game.

From that mark, a broader visual language emerged. A palette drawn from sand, fairway greens, and the vivid orange of the course flag introduced warmth and contrast, while restrained typography and minimal layouts kept the identity calm, contemporary, and adaptable across residential, golf, and hospitality applications.

Even after many years in this field, designing logos like this remains one of my favorite parts of building a brand. The challenge is always the same: expressing an entire idea in a single mark.

Learn more about this project adamsdesignboston.com

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