Condolence book for the passing of CCA

This CCA logo may be gone But TIAA CREF has obviously copied the idea from this logo. www2.smcvt.edu/alumni/images/TIAA%20CREF%20sign.jpg The originals always better than the copy-catter.
Mark J
Wednesday, October 12, 2005 00:29
Long live the CCA logo. Can we bury the VERIZON logo next? -bennie
benier koranache, creativemf.com
Thursday, May 12, 2005 21:40
The Stone Twins identified this logo as one of the greatest of the 20th century on the basis for what it mainly represents. Under its founder, Walter Paepke, CCA developed into one of America's most admired corporations. A corporate advertising campaign, entitled 'The Great Ideas of Western Man' featured the sayings of some of history's great thinkers, illustrated by some of the day's greatest artists. It didn't talk about cardboard boxes and the other containers the company made. It talked about values, ideals, social transformation and the role of spirit in the modern world.
Catherine Bakker, o2, London
Monday, February 28, 2005 11:55
This kind of logo reminds us that modernity is not a trend, not a style, not even an attitude. It is a lifelong pursuit to remain curious, lucid, relevant.
Art Johnson, XTC, Paris
Tuesday, February 08, 2005 10:53
Seriously, CCA, but not this one. I work for Cheil Communications America, a Korean ad agency in New Jersey. I'm doing research project on companies that use acronymns in their corporate identity.
Dean Mellis, CCA
Sunday, October 24, 2004 16:41
Once upon a time, the CCA was responsible for the greatest multi-artist poster series. En pace requiscat.
mb, C & I Design
Thursday, September 09, 2004 15:28
Does anyone else see the Fuji film identity in here?
Tim Stahl, AdHaus Creative Services
Thursday, December 18, 2003 08:32
Ralph E. Eckerstrom was a master of the dramatic understatement.
Lies Schroder, Leuven
Friday, December 05, 2003 12:38
I read with great interest in the book how this company propogated the important aspects of western civilisation... decades before Beneton!! CCA R.I.P.
Philip Thompson, Riberneck
Wednesday, December 03, 2003 18:06

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