Ingrid Picanyol
Designer · Founder
In their own words
We selected the Roobert font because of its squared and rounded terminations.
For the palette, we selected colours from the projects that work well with the project images.
Articles & interviews
- "Top 20 Influential Graphic Designers in 2025"
Creative Boom’s 2025 roundup highlights 20 graphic designers redefining visual communication through cultural storytelling, conceptual thinking, and innovative aesthetics. The article profiles figures like Temi Coker, Natasha Jen, and Marie Boulanger, showcasing their influence across branding, typography, and digital design. It underscores how these creatives balance authenticity, technology, and human emotion in their work.
- La Oficina del Parque by Studio Ingrid Picanyol
BP&O features Studio Ingrid Picanyol’s modular brand identity for Barcelona café and bar La Oficina del Parque. The design cleverly draws inspiration from Microsoft Excel’s grid system, transforming the software’s rigid structure into a playful, flexible visual language. The project uses a soothing yet vibrant palette and modular compositions across print and digital applications, celebrating creativity through constraint.
- The Edit: five projects including Ingrid Picanyol’s campaign for Torelló Mountain Film Festival
The article, part of The Brand Identity’s 'The Edit' series, highlights five recent design projects from studios around the world. Featured works include Ingrid Picanyol Studio’s campaign for Torelló Mountain Film Festival, Milieu Grotesque’s refreshed Boutique typeface poster, Classmate Studio’s book for BIVAK, Standard Projects’ identity for Programa, and Mucho’s branding for Overmoon. Each project showcases distinct creative approaches across branding, print, and digital design.
- Ingrid Picanyol Studio’s flexible identity system for CMV Architects is crisp, clean and concise
Ingrid Picanyol Studio developed a flexible and minimalist brand identity for CMV Architects, reflecting the firm's balance between large-scale capability and individual creativity. The rebrand features a variable wordmark, the Roobert typeface, and a restrained color palette drawn from CMV’s architectural projects. The result is a crisp, clean, and adaptable system that communicates unity and precision.