The Story Behind the Kirill Logo

From skate culture to Wynwood walls.

Skateboarder mid-air performing a trick with a green deck against a clear blue sky.”,

Born from Skate Culture

I designed the Kirill logo in 2011.

At the time, I wasn’t thinking about personal branding or marketing. I simply wanted a mark that felt authentic—something bold, memorable, and unmistakably mine.

The inspiration came from the skateboard culture I grew up with in the 1980s. As a kid, I spent countless hours skateboarding and was fascinated by the graphics and logos of brands like Santa Cruz, Alva, and Vision. Those companies understood that a logo could be more than an identifier. It could have attitude, personality, and a presence all its own.

That influence stayed with me.

When I designed the Kirill logo, I wanted it to have the same impact. Something that could be recognized from a distance. Something that felt powerful and direct. A mark that didn’t ask for attention—it demanded it.

More than a decade later, I still receive compliments on the logo, which is surprising considering it was created over fifteen years ago. It serves as a reminder that strong design isn’t always about following trends. Sometimes it’s about creating something distinctive enough to stand the test of time.

Over the years, the logo has become much more than a graphic. I’ve painted it on many of my large-scale murals and public art projects throughout Miami. If you’ve spent time exploring Wynwood, you’ve probably seen it hidden somewhere on a wall. It became my signature and a way to connect my artwork, design work, and personal identity.

At some point, it became personal enough that I had it tattooed on the inside of my arm.

Not because it’s a logo.

Because it represents a lifetime of creating.

Fifteen years later, the Kirill logo is still doing exactly what I hoped it would do when I first drew it: stand out, be remembered, and tell a small part of my story without saying a word.

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