Client
Supreme Federal Court of Brazil (STF)
Category
Branding & Identity
Year
2025

Branding STF (Supreme Federal Court of Brazil)

New visual identity for Brazil's Supreme Federal Court, created as creative director for the Court's new administration — nominated for Best Graphic Project of 2025 at the National Justice Award.

Visual identity proposal — new STF administration, presentation cover

How do you redesign the visual voice of the guardian of Brazil's Constitution? The new identity puts the institution at the center: sober blues anchor the system, offset white softens the reading, and a saturated green-yellow accent nods to the national flag — modern and subtle, never literal. Sora, a contemporary sans with personality, leads the typography; the serif Marjorie is used sparingly, to emphasize key words. Noise textures and gradients give the system its tactile finish. Content tone drives the design: light backgrounds for institutional, everyday topics; deep blues for rulings and sensitive matters — a simple rule that keeps a public institution's feed harmonious without ever feeling rigid. The identity now runs across the Court's official channels, reaching over 559K followers on Instagram, and is nominated for Best Graphic Project of 2025 at the National Justice Award.

Color palette

Institutional blue anchors the system as the base color across every combination and shade. Offset white replaces plain white, and a saturated green-yellow accent breaks the tone with a subtle nod to the national flag. Noise textures and gradients complete the palette.

Color palette: offset white, institutional blues, green-yellow and gradients

Typography

Sora, a contemporary sans with personality, is the identity's primary typeface. The serif Marjorie is used sparingly, in specific cases, to emphasize key words.

Typography: Sora (primary) and Marjorie (secondary)

Light applications

Light backgrounds for institutional, general and lighter content — the bright side of the system.

Light applications: institutional social media posts
Light applications: stories and disinformation-combat program post

Dark applications

Dark backgrounds for serious or sensitive content — rulings, trials and explainer series. Content tone drives the design.

Dark applications: Court rulings featuring the Justice statue
Dark applications: 'Understand' explainer series covering trials
Dark applications: YouTube broadcast cover and free digital publications

Instagram feed

No rigid color blocking: the feed follows content tone, blending light and dark backgrounds harmoniously across the official profile — over 559K followers.

Instagram feed applied to the Court's official profile

Identity transition

Before and after: the Supremo na Semana videocast in the previous identity and in the new one.

Identity transition: Supremo na Semana videocast, before and after

Flexible formats

The system flexes across formats — stories, posts, covers and banners — staying consistent at any ratio.

Flexible formats: Teachers' Day as banner, post and story

37 years of the Constitution

Special series, like the 37 years of the 1988 Constitution, bring the Court closer to the public with editorial language and photography of the justices.

37 years of the Constitution: justices' rulings series

In motion

The identity also lives in video: openings, stings and the Court’s broadcasts.

Identity in motion — new STF brand video
01 / 11