Mythora needed an identity that lived up to the mythology of the name. Not a logo — a totem. Something that would hold its own on a record sleeve, a gig poster, a stage backdrop, a t-shirt. Something with presence.
The first test for the mark was a band photograph. Could it sit above three faces and look like it belonged there — like the band had taken the name from the symbol, not the other way round.
What we built is closer to a mark. Letterforms that arc and melt — psychedelic, hand-pressed, stamped into existence. Nested at their centre: an all-seeing eye, a four-pointed star in its pupil. Cover either half and the other loses its meaning.
Posters built from the same visual vocabulary as the mark — op-art abstraction, hand-printed feel, the same obsessive rhythm the music lives in. Different colourways, same logic.
Every detail an argument for the brand. The record-label sticker — CAT NO 0020, CE, RoHS, barcode — plays it completely straight: the language of official certification applied to music. It's funny because it's serious.
When you settle on a visual language this confident, you don't need to keep introducing yourself. The third poster doesn't show the mark. It doesn't have to.
The brief from the band was minimal — they wanted something that looked the way they sound. Heavy, hypnotic, hand-made. Not a graphic-design exercise; a sigil.
Every output — mark, sticker, poster, pattern — is a different sentence in the same dialect.
Elysium Gallery Studios
210 High Street
Swansea, SA1 1PE
Booking Q3 2026