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Trends die. Logos that rely on gradients, drop shadows, and skeuomorphism look dated in five years. Yupangco’s work leans toward the geometric and the timeless. If you strip away the color, does the shape still hold power?
He represents the "infrastructure" of Philippine aesthetics. While others build the flashy pop-up stores, Martin Yupangco builds the foundation. And in the volatile world of branding, a strong foundation is the only thing that survives the earthquake of market trends.
Martin Yupangco’s work is famously "cool." It lacks the chaotic heat of guerrilla advertising. It is precise, measured, and mathematical. In branding, math (scaling, spacing, kerning) is often more important than magic.
His push for custom corporate fonts has quietly professionalized the entire local industry, moving it away from clip-art chaos into a global standard. For young designers and entrepreneurs reading this, Martin Yupangco’s career offers three hard-won lessons:
In the bustling world of Philippine advertising and design, certain names echo loudly: the award-winning ad agencies, the celebrity creative directors, and the viral campaigns. But then there is a quieter, arguably more profound, tier of influence—the brand architects who don't just run ads but build visual empires.
He has never been a paparazzi magnet. He doesn't host a reality TV show. He simply shows up, solves the problem, and moves to the next. In an industry of loud egos, Yupangco proves that the best designer is often a ghost in the machine. The Verdict Martin Yupangco is not a household name to the average commuter riding the MRT. But that commuter likely holds a banking app, looks at a billboard, or walks through a mall that has been psychologically optimized by Yupangco’s logic.
Let’s look at the man behind the monogram. Martin Yupangco is best known as the Founder and Creative Director of Martin Yupangco & Co. (MYC) , a design consultancy that has operated in Manila for decades. Unlike traditional advertising agencies that live and die by the 30-second TV spot, MYC plays the long game. Their currency is identity.
sits firmly in that second tier. If you’ve lived in the Philippines, interacted with its banking system, flown its flag carrier, or bought its packaged goods, you have likely felt his work without ever knowing his name.