The London-born bike brand unveils a global brand expression that celebrates its folding ingenuity while uniting an international community of over one million riders.
It’s fair to say that Brompton is both a British design classic and a cultural touchpoint. For half a century, the folding bike has been synonymous with ingenuity, portability, and a certain envious and understated London style.
Now, as the company celebrates its 50th anniversary, it’s also looking firmly ahead. To mark the milestone, Brompton has partnered with Studio Blackburn on a new identity and toolkit built around the positioning Life Unfolded.
The brief asked the studio to evolve the brand for a fast-expanding global audience without losing the quirk, craft, and cachet that made Brompton iconic in the first place.
“At Brompton, we’ve always believed our super-portable folding bikes represent more than transport,” said Dimitri Hon, senior creative at Brompton. “They not only help people navigate their city differently, they also help them see their city differently. Additionally, they hold great cultural significance, especially in Asia.
“We needed a refreshed branding system that could unify the Brompton brand worldwide whilst offering enough flexibility to reflect local nuances.”



That folding mechanism, which is so central to the bike’s cult appeal, became the foundation for Studio Blackburn’s design solution. Founder Paul Blackburn describes the concept: “Brompton is more than a bike, it’s a lifestyle and a community, but at its heart, it’s a moving product, so it needed a moving brand.
“We set out to design an identity that’s as intelligent, flexible and dynamic as the bike itself, giving Brompton’s teams worldwide the tools and confidence to bring the brand to life.”
Motion became the guiding principle, underpinned by the way a Brompton shifts from compact to ride-ready, which informed how the brand flexes across film, digital, and retail. Just as the bikes are offered in two-, six-, and twelve-speed gearing, the studio created design assets that can move and shift in varying intensities, from smooth, minimal transitions to more dynamic animations.
This thinking extends into the refreshed logo system, where the familiar Brompton mark now unfolds from a simple box into multiple variations that mirror the physical fold. Meanwhile, Studio Blackburn designed a bespoke typeface derived from the original logotype. With only eight letters to start from, the team expanded the forms into a full alphabet, giving Brompton a distinctive typographic voice that remains authentically its own.
Instead of leaning on a broad colour palette, the brand has committed to one defining shade of custom Klein blue. Paul describes it as “brand colour rather than product colour.” The blue acts as a universal thread – sometimes as a bold flood and sometimes as a subtle accent – but always unmistakably Brompton.
The system is further enriched with icons, passport-style stamps, and geometric shapes inspired by the bike’s own components. These details add texture and authenticity, reinforcing the sense that the brand belongs to a worldwide movement.


One of the most challenging tasks was creating a system that could adapt to very different cultural contexts. In the UK, Brompton has always leaned into practicality, beating the Tube, tackling city commutes, and folding neatly under desks. In Asia, the bike has taken on an almost fashion-adjacent status, signalling lifestyle aspiration and cultural cachet, so Life Unfolded had to hold both.
“This is very much a brand evolution,” said Paul. “Some things are pure Brompton and should always be present—the logotype, box, typeface, behavioural qualities and the colour blue. However, we left space for local interpretation, particularly in terms of imagery.
“Real riders in real cities are what we call Brompton’s ‘other colour’. That emotion in motion allows the brand to convey the joy, freedom, and spontaneity that movement brings.”
The launch coincides not only with Brompton’s anniversary but with a moment of expansion for the brand. New product categories, new stores, and a growing international audience mean the identity must act as a unifying tool as much as a marketing device.
Chris Willingham, Brompton’s CMO, said: “Studio Blackburn was very quick to understand the Brompton brand and how it needed to evolve globally. The new branding system fuses the craft and ingenuity that exists within the four walls of our London factory with the joy and freedom that the bike provides for our million-plus riders around the world.
“It’s the ideal expression of our Life Unfolded platform and will help us on our next phase of growth.”
For Paul and his team, the key was respect, both for Brompton’s 50-year heritage and for its restless, forward-looking spirit. He said: “Brompton’s purpose continues to be creating urban freedom for happier lives.
“That plays out differently around the world, but the insight is the same: Brompton owners choose to break from monotony and engage more fully with the city around them. The identity had to express that sense of choice and movement.”



With the global rollout already underway, the refreshed brand expression is set to appear across stores, campaigns, and digital platforms. The anniversary year has offered the perfect launchpad, but the long-term ambition is to reinforce Brompton’s position not just as a British design icon, but as a unifying force for a global community of riders.
And if you’re wondering whether all of this might feel a bit lofty for a humble folding bike, Paul has a quick answer: “It’s walking the walk as a brand – or pedalling the pedal, perhaps.”