FEATURED ARTICLES
FEATURED

Here’s to you, 2024.
A final tip of the cap to 2024 and all the brands that came with it. It never gets old seeing these designs come to life in the wild.

Good Design is in the Details
After years of honing our skills and working together to push the envelope and turn the key, our Tramp team of designers has found that good design lies in the details. For us, it comes down to the small things; the kerning of a headline, how colors contrast against each other, the uniformity in line weight. Here are the details our designers look at when putting a piece together.

New Brand, Inspired by the Old.
Using the original vintage logo as inspiration, we created a modern icon with accompanying typography to stand out amongst the crowd, which also looks sharp on merch and even better on terrain park features.

North Country Prosperity, One Donor at a Time.
Our work for NRDC is an example of how Trampoline can help reshape an organization with authenticity and an eye for longevity. Projects like these are successful when they develop as a partnership. We get to know communities, listen to stakeholders, and genuinely plan for the most enduring impact we can have. Trampoline becomes an extension of your team.

In Good Company.
When people ask about BCorp, we are still learning how to explain it. And when asked why we became certified the best way to answer is that it just felt right.
As we continue to learn from and about the BCorp community, it's been wonderful to realize just how many other companies have taken the same steps.

The glass is half full at Paradox
Since the announcement of Paradox’s new brand launch, updated core can designs and recreated specialty brew labels naturally followed, in addition to fresh content—photo, video, and social. New brand + updated vibe = new material to create a broader appeal.

Lending a hand in Maine
An emotional and sensitive project that our team poured themselves into, hoping to capture the immensity of the people who were willing to bare their souls to us.
Q: “I've got one... how about the differences and roles between/for PR and Marketing? Uses and time/place for each? Just a thought from a reader! Keep up the great work in '25.”
A: Over the years, prospective clients have called wanting PR, others have wanted marketing, others advertising, which emerged from a need for PR. Let's break it down.