Don’t judge city by a logo
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Dave Brooks
As the Huntington Beach tourism community tries to settle on a new
logo in its “Surf City USA” campaign, city leaders are moving the
city away from its own surfing moniker to a more official look.
Last week, City Administrator Penny Culbreth-Graft had public
information officer Laurie Payne change the logo on the city’s
website from the “Surf City, Huntington Beach” logo to the city’s
official seal. The seal includes a picture of breaking waves and
Catalina Island -- the same image visitors sometimes see when looking
west from a city beach on a very clear day.
“She said she felt it was more official-looking,” Payne said.
There were also concerns that the city didn’t own the rights to
the 11-year-old logo, licensed to business partners Tina Viray and
Bud Wescott, who operate a small apparel store on the Huntington
Beach Pier. While the city has the trademark for the phrase “Surf
City, Huntington Beach,” ownership of the actual graphic is a little
ambiguous.
“The city owns the trademarked phrase, and we created the
graphics,” said Viray, who estimated her business has sold more than
100,000 items with the Surf City moniker on it.
The seal the city is now using will appear on some letterhead and
official documents, but city employees will likely have a choice
about which graphic they want to use.
“(Culbreth-Graft) hasn’t sent out any policy on it yet,” Payne
said.
The city will now have three logos -- the city seal, the Surf City
logo, and the “HB” graphic created in the 1970s through a city
contest. That graphic contains images of a sailboat and a surfer to
represent the city’s beach community, as well as a picture of a home
and a molecule to represent the many people working in Huntington
Beach’s aerospace industries.
Councilman Dave Sullivan said he wishes the City Council would
have been consulted about the change of the city’s seal.
“I would rather see a seal that represents the city instead of a
view of Catalina,” he said.
He also said he did not like the Surf City logo because it only
paid homage to the surfing community.
“I like the idea of a seal that represents everything that goes on
in the city,” he said.
In the meantime, the Huntington Beach Conference and Visitor’s
Bureau is working to solidify it’s “Surf City, USA” marketing
campaign and has narrowed its logo down to a horizontal graphic
featuring a photograph of the Huntington Beach Pier in the shape of
surf board.
During a Tuesday Board of Directors meeting, the group voted
unanimously to proceed forward with that image after survey results
indicated overwhelming support for the logo over a graphic of a
shapely surfer, longboarding near the Huntington Beach Pier.
The horizontal logo “rated really high with residents and overall
visitors,” said bureau President Doug Traub, adding that the image
was especially popular with overnight guests.
“Coincidentally, those are the same type of people we’re trying to
reach,” he said.
The new logo will be sent back to a graphic artist, who will
present several different color treatments for the new logo -- board
members said they are interested in seeing the image in more than
just orange and black.
After the board chooses a final color scheme, the image will be
licensed through Los Angeles-based Global Icons and sold on
everything from beach cruisers to T-shirts and will appear on
promotional material for the Conference and Visitor’s Bureau.
QUESTION
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* DAVE BROOKS covers City Hall. He can be reached at (714)
966-4609 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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