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A Swiss-style case-study layout that tiles a giant Haroshi wordmark, a t-shirt product grid, a Russell Simmons pull-quote, a North Face logo, and a styled portrait into numbered modular panels.
Summary
A modular case-study spread that arranges branding deliverables into discrete rectangular panels, anchored by an oversized "Haroshi" wordmark set in white on near-black.
Visual description
Six panels sit on a pale gray ground in a loose grid, each tagged with a small corner number and a tiny icon. Top-left is a dark panel with the word "Haroshi" in heavy white sans-serif filling its width. Top-right holds a clean six-cell grid of folded t-shirts in black, olive, blush, and cream. The lower-left light panel carries a multi-line pull-quote ("One of the most profitable brands was headed by hip-hop music entrepreneur Russell Simmons"). A mid-gray panel reads "Brand Publicity," a light panel shows The North Face logo, and a small inset photograph at the bottom-center shows a styled figure in a blazer outdoors against green foliage.
Key takeaway
Treating each branding asset (wordmark, product shots, quote, partner logo, lookbook photo) as an interchangeable tile in one grid, unified by consistent corner numbering and a single neutral background. The one near-black panel does all the contrast work in an otherwise pale layout.
Reuse notes
A strong template for a portfolio case-study page or a brand-overview slide where you need to show many deliverables at once without clutter. The corner index numbers imply a system; reuse them as a wayfinding device. Needs real product photography and a confident wordmark to carry the composition.









