Their initial brief was inspiring and humorous. I was sold and we started working on an identity that the Postman team could love and call their own. Abhinav was passionate about the product and where it was going to be in the near future. Speaking to the team instantly convinced me that I should help them out with their brand, even if it wasn’t initially a UX job.
![postman logo postman logo](https://dab1nmslvvntp.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/1455890377postmanlogo.jpg)
Here was a product that was incredible useful and had so much potential to be much more. As a UX designer, Postman fascinated me immediately. I first heard about Postman through mutual friends in early 2014. Here is Aditi on the design process and the experience of making the logo: Luckily, Aditi agreed to work with on the app icon and later, defining Postman’s brand identity. I did not have high hopes of her agreeing to work on the project as my bank balance was not exactly in good shape. Through a succession of random events and the help of close friends, I ended up emailing Aditi, an accomplished designer and an artist. This icon was as generic as a stock REST client app icon can be. Lacking any graphic design skills whatsoever, I had used a stock icon for Postman. I had switched to working on Postman full-time a few months ago and the result was the Postman packaged app for the new Chrome App Platform.
![postman logo postman logo](https://logos-download.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Postman_Logo.png)
Postman was “launched” through a post on Stackoverflow that still is the largest source of referrals for us.
![postman logo postman logo](http://a.files.bbci.co.uk/childrens-binarystore/cbeebies/postman-pat_brand_logo_bid_1.png)
In March 2014, Postman had been in existence for almost two years.