This guy that made this particular video is a Unilag student, sat beside him when he was working on the render in Cafe one some weeks back. Crazy stufff
logo-first identity design: you design the mark, then deconstruct it into patterns, pull the colors from it, build the whole visual language around the symbol.
pros:
it's easier to sell. clients see the logo early and relax. the feedback loop is simpler because you're presenting one thing at a time. and there's a built-in visual coherence because everything traces back to one source.
cons: you can almost always tell. the identity feels derived. the pattern is just the logo exploded / repeated. the palette is just the logo colors. the whole system orbits one shape and can feel thin once you take the mark away.
world-first identity design: you define the mood, the palette, the typography, the texture, and few versions of the logo emerge from that context.
pros: the identity feels like an ecosystem. every element traces back to brand's DNA. it's easier to play with fixed assets and flexed assets. the brand has depth beyond the symbol. as a deisgner, it forces you to form opinion on how does the UI tile / body text font / icon set / colour of merch very early on.
cons: it's a harder to communciate. you're asking the client to trust the direction before they see the thing they often care about most (logo). the feedback process is messier because you're presenting a full world and asking someone to feel it and make decision on few ingredients at once. sometimes an ingredient changes in the process and the identity loses cohesiveness.
@peng_writer@MAF_clothing_ I sew beautiful dresses like these. They are made on order and takes 5 to 7 working days.
Price ranges from #25,000 to #28,500.
President @officialABAT is running the Most Useless Government in the history of Useless Governments!!!
How many more Nigerians have to die due to this abysmal level of incompetence?
Nigerians wake up everyday to lament one tragedy of the other.
Unbearably heart-wrenching!!!
Pewbeam is live 🎉
This was just a dream, a dream I didn’t even know was possible—but I decided to pursue it anyway. Today, that dream is now a reality. We have a desktop app (Windows and macOS—this weekend) that can do all of this and even more. Over the last six months, I’ve pushed myself and my team hard, and I’ve seen people become hopeful and genuinely blessed by this product. I’ve received strong support from pastors, church members, techies, and several media houses and reporters. It has been a great honor to spend myself on something worthwhile.
We’ve built an AI-native presentation app that displays relevant scriptures on screen in under 80 ms, without needing a volunteer. We’re starting with scriptures, but we’re growing into a comprehensive presentation software, with slides launching next month.
From testing @pewbeam_ai in churches over the last four weeks, pastors have been able to focus on what matters instead of juggling or micromanaging the media team while preaching. Church members have been able to follow their pastor’s references in real time and take better notes. In the words of a member from one of the test churches: “Pewbeam changed the way I follow sermons in church completely.” This is the kind of impact I see Pewbeam having on people’s faith and on how church and worship are done.
Pewbeam’s mission is to ensure the Church is not left behind in the AI era. We’re starting with this application, with many more to come in the next few months. We’ll keep working with stakeholders in the Christian faith, collect feedback, and build tools that better support discipleship. And unlike previous waves of technology, I believe we can be among the first movers in this AI revolution.
With all that said, the final build of the app is ready, and we’re launching for public download on February 25, 2026. The app has a generous free tier for small churches and fellowships, and a paid plan (location-based pricing) that unlocks unlimited access to all features.
If you’ve been following this journey, I appreciate you, and I assure you it will be worth it.
Please download, subscribe, and use in your church.