The problem with the 'creative' use of letter forms in logos has been noted in Fancy Graphics - an 'A' is not a 'V'. Here the letter 'V' has been inverted to be read as an 'A', giving rise to many complications: see - https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2020/01/fancy-graphics-a-is-not-v.html
It is not as though the letter 'A' cannot be used in a graphic image. The AACA – Architects Accreditation Council of Australia (no apostrophe?) – uses three of them in its logo, unadulterated! However, it seems that something has to be done to make the idea ‘creative,’ so the letter ‘C’ suffers a change, and something like Morse code has been added as a base line below the letters. What might this mystery be for? What might it say? Why is it there?
Like the 'AO' image, this one can be vertical too.
The ‘C’ is transformed into two concentric arcs. Just why this might be remains a puzzle. Could it indicate some collegiate enterprise – a gathering for debate, discussion? Might it be an attempt to include the 'o' of the 'of' in the logo? One would like it to mean something, because without any context driving the variation, the whole image becomes merely a visual game; an effort to make the graphic look interestingly different. Is this why the pseudo Morse code has been added to the letters – to make it ‘arty’? Here one is reminded of the large scale braille used decoratively on the fascia of The National Museum of Australia in Canberra, a bizarre concept considering that it relies only on being seen for its impact: see - https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2011/01/on-australias-national-museum.html
Does this explain the Morse code? Why has the sequence of different lines changed in the listing?
This strategy seems to be the same ad hoc, 'clever' approach that most recent architecture suffers from. We are left perusing what looks like personal efforts to be bespoke, nothing more – simple whimsy. Instead of depth in meaning, we are left with a huge vacancy, a void; spinning in a muddle of nothingness as we search for substance, but discover little other than individual efforts to be smart. One does not have to look far to understand the problems of mental health in our society today. In the effort to decipher the message, one wonders: might the graphic have become too illegible if all the ‘A’s had been modified as a matching set? Did it look too ordinary without the dots and the dashes?
- see: https://designbytoko.com/design/aaca for the designer's presentation and explanation.
Is there a lower case version too?
The problem with logos and letters is the use of the acronym in text. While the 'A's can be reproduced accurately, the 'C' cannot be easily replicated, and has to be changed to an ordinary 'C', a letter in the same font as that used for the 'A's. This change effectively creates another identity. In this case there appears to be a further complication with lower case letters appearing without any mucking around with the styling of these fonts. Could one get a little confused with the intent to define an identity when the graphics are so apparently variable? Is 'aaca' trying to say something different to 'AACA'? Why the change? Could this be an old graphic? Is one a chatty version of the more formal incantation? Who knows? Why does the lower case 'c' not use the concentric lines of the upper case 'C'? There are many questions. Is the problem that the Internet never discards anything? Good graphics do not leave questions, only answers to be discovered, revealed. The Jacobs Creek graphic is an excellent example of a good logo: see - https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2015/01/graphics-from-grapevine.html
This array of notes and dots and dashes seems to be an attempt to rationalise the idea:
but what is it saying? What is the purpose of the variation?
Let's attempt to deconstruct the code. The first thing that one notices is that the code varies for each letter. The 'A' for 'Architects', (was the apostrophe just too messy?), has two dashes. Might this represent the plurality of the professional group? Is it a nod to the missing apostrophe? The 'A' for 'Accreditation' gets a row of six dots. Why six; there are seven states and territories. Do the dots represent deliberation? Maybe they are a diagram for the process of ticking off the boxes? The 'C' for 'Council' gets a pair of parallel lines that replicate the concentric arcs used for the letter. Could this underline the importance of 'Council'? Do the lines highlight the core meaning of the AACA; or do they just copy the style of the 'C'? The final 'A' for 'Australia' gets one heavy line for its code. Might this singular identity represent the whole country as one? Could it identify the fact that this Council is relevant to all parts of the country?
The code extends beyond the letter, apparently whenever it might be interesting. Why?
This analysis is pure speculation, an attempt to make some sense out of an idea that could be visual only. The presentation of the graphic does not make any intent clear, other than that things have had to look professionally slick; impressive. Graphics should be more articulate than this, especially when a body chooses to address the world.
Where does this logo fit in? Is it a discarded AACA graphic?
It turns out to be one amongst many alternatives.
There is another issue with sets of letters. The AACA seems clear enough when Googled in Australia - it gets page one - but it is not alone. The Free Dictionary gives the meaning of AACA as the Antique Automobile Club of America - see : https://www.google.com/search?q=what+does+aaca+mean&oq=what+does+aaca+mean&aqs=chrome..69i57j0l7.4006j1j8&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8 In addition to this meaning, there is the American Association of Clinical Anatomists; the African Academy for Cinematic Arts; the Alibaba Anti-Counterfeiting Alliance; the Alaska Air Carriers Association; the Asian American Civil Association; and many more groups that can claim the AACA title - see below. The Architects' - (one should use the apostrophe) - Accreditation Council of Australia is not unique in having this acronym. One has to be very careful with letters and meanings these days, especially when one wants to relate clearly to others in different countries where AACA could refer to many different things. Who knows what the AACA might be getting confused with?
The point could be made that a body that promotes competency should be rigorous in the presentation of its own identity. It could end up looking foolish.
AACA could mean anything. Just imagine someone writing cryptically, a common approach to digital communications today: . . . At AfriCA/AmeriCA. The letters really turn out to be An Amazing Cacophony of Acronyms.
MEANING OF ACRONYM AACA
N-acryloyl-6-aminocaproic acid ***** AACA And the American Association of Anatomists **** AACA Asian American Civic Association Association Organization **** AACA Atlanta Area Compensation Association Association Organization **** AACA Australasian Association of Campus Activities Association Organization **** AACA Australian Acupuncture Association Australia Association Medical Organization *** AACA Authentic Artifact Collectors Association Association Organization Performing arts *** AACA Australian Association of Consulting Archaeologists Organization Archaeology * AACA acylaminocephalosporanic acid Amino Acid * AACA Army Air Corporation Association Association * AACA American Association of American * AACA Advance America Cash Advance * AACA African American Cultural Awareness * AACA Association of Chartered Certified Accountants Accounting * AACA Architects Accreditation Council of Australia Architecture * AACA Athletic Association of Catholic Academies * AACA 1-adamantane carboxylic acid * AACA Alaskan Artifact Collectors Association * AACA Academy for the Advancement of Children with Autism * AACA Asian Australasian Congress of Anaesthesiologists * AACA Aircraft Airworthiness Certification Agency * AACA American Alliance of Creditor Attorneys, Inc. * AACA Antique Automobile Club of America Museums * AACA Asian American Cultural Association * AACA Antique Auto Club of America * AACA Afghan Assistance Coordination Authority Technology * AACA African American Cultural Alliance * AACA African-American Cultural Association * AACA Airborne Antisubmarine Warfare Coordination Aircraft * AACA Aircraft Armament Chiefs Association * AACA American Academy of Cardiovascular Administrators * AACA American Academy of Consumer Attorneys * AACA American Apparel Contractors Association * AACA American Association of Certified Allergists * AACA American Association of Certified Appraisers Professional organizations * AACA American Association of Clinical Anatomists * AACA Amphibious Auto Club of America * AACA Army Airlift Clearance Authority Military * AACA Asian American Contractors Association * AACA Atlanta Air Cargo Association * AACA Atlantic Apparel Contractors Association, Inc. * AACA Accreditation Council of Australia * AACA Adaptive Ant Colony Algorithm * AACA Advances in Applied Clifford Algebras * AACA African American Contractors Association * AACA Amateur Aircraft Constructors Association * AACA Architectural Accreditation Council of Australia * AACA Association of Crime Analysts * AACA Aviation and Air Cargo * AACA American Alliance of Creditor Attorneys * AACA Ambient Atmosphere Conditions and Aging * AACA American Association of Creative Artists * AACA Aneurysm of the Anterior Communicating Artery * AACA Armenian American Cultural Association, Inc. * AACA Asociación Argentina de Críticos de Arte * AACA Associate of the Association of Cost Accountants * AACA Australians Against Child Abuse * AACA Autopia Absentee Catalog Auction * AACA Academy of Chiropractic Acupuncture * AACA Addis Ababa City Administration * AACA Afghan Aid Coordination Agency * AACA Afghan Aid Coordination Authority * AACA Afghan Assistance Coordination Agency * AACA Alaska Air Carrier Association * AACA American A Cappella Alliance * AACA Anchorage Air Cargo Association * AACA Area Council for the Arts * AACA Army Air Clearance Authority * AACA Association of Certified Appraisers * AACA Association of Clinical Anatomists * AACA Association of Commercial Agents * AACA Association of Consulting Archaeologists * AACA American Air Campers Association * AACA Arts and Crafts Association * AACA Asian American Chamber Association * AACA Arizona Association of Crime Analysts * AACA Artists Against Corporate Art * AACA Academy of Construction and Architecture * AACA Addis Ababa City Adminstration * AACA Adult Assisted Care Associates * AACA Advanced Attendant Care Agency * AACA Afghanistan Assistance Coordination Authority * AACA African Christians in America * AACA ALLIANCE ATLANTIS COMM A * AACA American Arts Crafts Alliance * AACA Antique and Classic Automobiles * AACA Antique Automotive Club of America * AACA Ariana Afghanistan Community Association * AACA Ashford Alliance Community Association * AACA Assessment of Aircraft Attrition * AACA Associated Advertising Clubs of America * AACA Association of Certified Allergists * AACA Australian Access Class Association * AACA Aviation Associates Central Asia * AACA Asociación Argentina de Control Automático * AACA Afghanistan Assistance Co-ordination Authority * AACA Alabama Animal Control Association * AACA Atlantic Apparel Contractors Association * AACA All Assam Chess Association * AACA American Automobile Claims and Appraisals * AACA Australian Association of Campus Activities * AACA Academy of Conducting at Aspen * AACA Advancement of Central Asian * AACA Antique Automibile Club America * AACA Arden Arcade Community Alliance * AACA Area Commission for the Arts * AACA Association of Artists Craftsmen and Architects * AACA Automotive Air Conditioning Association * AACA Athens Area Council for the Arts * AACA Accredited Air Cargo Agents
Read more at: http://acronymsandslang.com/AACA-meaning.html
One has to be thankful that the Architects' Accreditation Council of Australia made the list! - well, sort of. It is scheduled as the 'Architectural' Accreditation Council of Australia. At least in this his form, the nagging problem of the apostrophe goes away.
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