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A six-panel color-block grid where a single fat looping squiggle in each cell carries a curved line-name label, like a playful transit-map identity system.
Summary
A two-by-three grid of full-bleed color panels, each containing one thick rounded squiggle whose loops carry a small all-caps label set on a curved path, reading like the named lines of a transit or route system.
Visual description
Six equal cells tile the frame. Each is a solid saturated field (maroon, cream, pink, blue, green, orange) holding a single fat brushstroke-style squiggle in a contrasting color that loops and crosses itself. A short all-caps sans label rides one of the curves on a baseline path: "NEW BRICKS", "BLUE LINE", "OLD BRICKS", "PINK LINE", "GREEN LINE", "CAST IRON". The strokes are uniform-weight with rounded caps, and the label color matches the panel background so it punches out of the squiggle. Colors are deliberately clashing yet balanced across the grid.
Key takeaway
One repeatable motif (the looping fat stroke) plus a swappable background color generates a whole family of route or category marks from a single rule. Setting the label on the curve itself fuses type and graphic so each cell is one object, not a logo plus a caption.
Reuse notes
Great for a transit, festival, or product-line system that needs many distinct-but-related marks. The clashing palette signals friendly and energetic, so steer it toward consumer, culture, or events rather than enterprise. Keep the stroke weight identical across cells or the family stops reading as a set.









