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Kushi Bar branding by a creative director and brand strategist, featuring a distinctive mascot, clean typography, and contemporary visual assets.

KUSHI BAR

/OVERVIEW

Kushi Bar started with a simple observation. Everyone knows sushi, but not everyone knows kimbap. Rather than correct people, the brand leans into the overlap. Familiar enough to feel approachable, different enough to be its own thing.

The concept reimagines Korean kimbap through a contemporary takeaway lens. Bold flavours, fast service, and an identity that doesn’t over-explain itself. Kushi Bar borrows the visual shorthand of sushi culture, rolls, chopsticks, takeaway bags, then quietly rewrites the rules beneath the surface.

At the heart of the identity is a small mascot. A box-shaped kimbap roll that blends the food and the packaging into one simple character. Part roll, part takeaway box, it becomes a visual anchor for the brand, playful without being childish, memorable without needing explanation. It brings warmth and personality to the system while reinforcing the idea that this is food made to be grabbed, carried, and enjoyed.

The wider visual language mirrors that balance. Clean, graphic forms are paired with simplified line illustrations and soft humour. The palette stays restrained, allowing the mascot and messaging to carry the personality. Everything is designed to feel modern, confident, and instantly recognisable in fast-paced, real-world environments.

Kushi Bar isn’t trying to teach. It’s trying to feed people well. The brand speaks in short statements, lets the food do the talking, and understands that sometimes the best way to introduce something new is to make it feel familiar first.

At its core, Kushi Bar is about flavour without ceremony. Good food, rolled tight, wrapped up, and taken away. No rules. No lectures. Just something you’ll want to eat before you get home.

Brand strategist and creative director portfolio image for Kushi Bar, highlighting the packaging design, colour palette, and fast casual brand system.

/THE APPROACH

The strategy centred around accessibility. If the product was going to sit adjacent to sushi in the mind of the customer, the brand needed to use that association intelligently rather than resist it. Sushi became the entry point, not the definition. The visual and verbal identity borrows just enough shorthand to feel recognisable, while quietly establishing its own lane beneath the surface.

From there, the concept was shaped around the takeaway experience itself. Kushi Bar isn’t positioned as a formal dining brand. It lives in movement. In quick decisions, lunchtime cravings, dinner on the run, and food that still feels satisfying when eaten from a box or bag. That idea informed the tone, structure, and overall restraint of the identity system.

At the centre of the brand is the mascot, a box shaped kimbap roll that merges the product and the packaging into one simple character. Part food, part takeaway box, it becomes the visual anchor of the brand. It brings personality without forcing it, and humour without tipping into novelty. More importantly, it gives the brand an ownable symbol that works instantly across packaging, signage, social media, and merchandise.

The wider visual language was designed to support that same balance. Clean graphic shapes, simplified line illustration, and a restrained palette keep the system feeling modern and easy to recognise in fast paced environments. Nothing feels overworked. The charm comes from clarity, not clutter. Messaging stays short, direct, and self assured. The brand doesn’t over explain because it doesn’t need to. It trusts that the food, the identity, and the experience will do the work together.

As a full identity system, the brand was built to flex. From takeaway packaging and menus through to in store graphics and digital touchpoints, every element was designed to feel cohesive, ownable, and commercially usable from day one.

Creative director and brand strategist work for Kushi Bar, showing a modern kimbap brand identity designed for takeaway, signage, and digital touchpoints.
Kushi Bar case study image by a creative director and brand strategist, featuring logo design, supporting graphics, and a memorable hospitality brand world.

/THE OUTCOME

Kushi Bar feels instantly approachable, but never generic. It uses familiarity as a bridge, not a crutch, which allows the brand to introduce something new without feeling niche or hard to access.

The identity gives the business a clear personality. The mascot creates recognition. The restrained visual system keeps it modern. The messaging holds everything together with confidence and ease. Rather than competing through noise, the brand stands out through clarity and charm.

Most importantly, Kushi Bar feels built for the way people actually eat. Fast, casual, flavour driven, and easy to return to. It doesn’t try to turn kimbap into a lecture or a trend piece. It turns it into something desirable, memorable, and part of everyday life.

Kushi Bar proves that not every food brand needs to over tell its story. Sometimes the smartest move is to make something feel familiar enough to try, then strong enough to remember. Good food. Strong identity. No unnecessary ceremony.

Brand identity for Kushi Bar by a creative director and brand strategist, with playful illustration, food packaging, and strong visual recognition.
Brand identity for Kushi Bar by a creative director and brand strategist, with playful illustration, food packaging, and strong visual recognition.
Brand identity for Kushi Bar by a creative director and brand strategist, with playful illustration, food packaging, and strong visual recognition.

Ready  to  build  a  brand  that  sells?

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