Engineered for
the Individual

FORM, 2026

Most branding projects start with a logo. This one started with a question nobody in the category was asking. The goal was to build a complete brand identity from the ground up, for a product that had never been taken seriously enough to deserve one.

Project: Brand Identity & Launch Campaign
Role: Art Direction, Copywriting, Brand Strategy, Graphic Design
Credit: Mason Nash, David Ramirez

Problem

The mouth guard category hasn’t evolved in over 60 years. Guards are designed to a price point with a “one size fits none solution.” The serious athlete who is deliberate about their gear has never been given a single reason to be deliberate about their mouth guard.

Opportunity

No one has built a real identity in this space, spoken to the serious athlete with any conviction, nor has asked what a specific body actually needs. The category is full, and the position is empty. That gap only exists once.

Solution

Create the first mouth guard brand built around the individual, their sport, their position, and their specific physical demands. Built for the athlete who already knows, “Not yet. Keep going.”


WHY FORM?

“Form is technique, shape, and the foundation of every sport. Form is the most personal thing an athlete owns and a name that lives in every sport.”

— Mason Nash

Personify the Brand

  • The Quiet Conviction. A brand that doesn't perform for attention. We show up, tell the truth, and trust the right person to recognize it.

  • Delayed Gratification. Patience plus strategy. Not waiting, but building. Every product decision, every design choice, every word written through this single lens. The Delayed Gratifier is the mindset that defines our audience.

  • Quiet. Direct. Earned. Restraint is used as confidence. Saying less to mean more.

Positioning Statement

For the athlete who measures themselves by what they do when nobody is watching. Engineered for one body, one demand, one standard.

Yours.

A Palette with a Philosophy

Four colors. Each one is a moment in the delayed gratification arc.

CHALK

#FFFBFC

Clarity & Precision. The blank page before any work begins.

SCAR

#121619

A scar is not a wound. It is proof that something happened, was endured, and healed into something permanent.

IRON

#9B2915

Dense & Immovable. This is the commitment being held regardless of circumstance.

GRIND

#747C29

The in-between. Grind doesn't lead. It connects. Grind lives between the beginning and the final results.

Going to Market

Going to Market

You Never Needed an Audience

FORM, 2026

Houston, we have a problem.
Built not to introduce a brand to an audience, but to introduce the athlete back to themselves. Rooted in the philosophy of delayed gratification, the work doesn't sell what could be. It names what already is. Every asset reflects the athlete's own journey back at them with enough specificity to land one line, in the past tense:
You never needed an audience.

Project: Brand Identity & Launch Campaign
Role: Art Direction, Copywriting, Brand Strategy, Graphic Design
Credit: Mason Nash, David Ramirez

You Never Needed An Audience

FORM's launch campaign is for the athlete sports marketing has spent sixty years walking past. The campaign doesn't introduce a brand to an audience. It introduces the athlete back to themselves. Four deliverables. One philosophy.

Problem

The mouth guard category hadn't moved in sixty years. Three companies owned seventy percent of it. The product was designed for a price point, not a performance standard. The athlete was never the standard.

Opportunity

Sports marketing kept shouting. Every major brand in the performance category needed an audience to land, while culture was moving the other way, through the anti-hype movement, lock-in culture, and quiet luxury. The delayed gratifier was waiting for a brand like FORM, built around the work that doesn't get filmed.

Solution

Project Houston steps into that opening with one strategic inversion: instead of introducing FORM to an audience, the campaign introduces the athlete back to themselves.

4 C Success Story

Culture

1

Plant a flag around delayed gratification as an identity, making it a thing people self-claim, not a thing they get assigned. The audience doesn’t need to be told to “Just Do It.”


Community

2

We do not attract customers. We are discovered by the people who already live our mindset. The community is not built around FORM; it is built around the standard FORM represents.


Commerce

3

The right person encounters FORM and immediately thinks: this was made for me. No discount messaging is needed when a purchase feels inevitable, not impulsive.


Credibility

4

Earn through proof, not just through placement. Every asset created must be specific enough that it cannot be faked by a competitor.

First, we honor what the highlights miss.
The Quiet Ones is an ambassador series of eight athletes, selected for what they survived rather than what they won. Out-of-home posters live outside their home stadiums and cities, while the highlights happen inside.

Billboard on a red brick building with the text 'You never needed an audience. Twenty years of patience.' and a black and white image of a female athlete crouching on a track with a soccer ball in the background.
A large black and white advertisement on a tall building in an urban cityscape, featuring a female boxer tying her hand wraps, with the text 'You never needed an audience. The comeback starts in private.'
A large black and white advertisement on a tall building in an urban cityscape, featuring a female boxer tying her hand wraps, with the text 'You never needed an audience. The comeback starts in private.'
City building under construction with a billboard featuring a baseball player and inspirational quote, set against a clear blue sky.
A large outdoor billboard on top of a building displays a black-and-white image of a man with hockey skates drinking from a water bottle while standing on a hockey rink with hockey sticks lying on the ice. The text on the billboard reads: "They measured. You wrong. You never needed an audience." The billboard is attached to a high-rise building in an urban setting with other buildings visible in the background.
Large billboard on a city building featuring a muscular football player in helmet and athletic clothing running through cones on a track, with the text 'You never needed an audience. The work came before the fame.' and the name 'Jeremiyah Love' at the bottom.

Then, we make it personal.
Eight custom mouth guards, each engineered around one athlete's body and visually unmistakable as their own. Lined up next to each other, no two guards are engineered the same. Posted on Instagram as the next chapter of The Quiet Ones, the product page and the campaign asset collapse into one.

Black and white photo of a female soccer player in athletic gear, dribbling a soccer ball among cones, with text overlay 'The Builds: Engineering for the Individual,' and her name 'Rose Lavelle,' indicating she is a midfielder.
Graphic design presentation featuring a female athlete in black athletic wear, with a focus on sports apparel branding. The image showcases a customized soccer jersey with the text 'LAVELLE' and an American flag-inspired Team USA exterior palette, including jersey design elements and a nameplate encoding, on a black background with a dark field.
Close-up of a soccer ball with a lightweight, advanced composite design, featuring a 2mm thin gauge profile, overlaid on a black-and-white photo of a female athlete on a soccer field, with informational text about the materials and design.
A fitness infographic titled 'Performance Engineering' showing a woman in athletic gear doing a drill with a protective knee brace labeled 'Recover Aligned Bite Plate'. The diagram highlights features like 'Precision Bite Alignment' and 'Chafe Protection'.
Black and white image of a female soccer player, Trinity Rodman, in a training stance with a soccer ball at her feet, wearing athletic gear, in a dark indoor setting with the text "The Builds: Engineering for the Individual".
Infographic showing a pink bubblegum with small diamond encoding, bubblegum's bubblegum and soft coral gradient, hand-finished surface, and features an athlete in a sports scene.
Close-up of a diagram explaining the layers of a neuromuscular bite plate composite, with a woman in the background at a sports field under stadium lights.
A female athlete on a soccer field with a detailed overlay of performance engineering features. Highlights include precision jaw alignment, neuromuscular balance, superior fit and chafe protection, and a recover focused bite geometry.
Black and white photo of a baseball pitcher in a dynamic pitching pose, with a bucket of baseballs in front.
Design concept featuring a purple skull-shaped object with gold and green accents, labeled as 'Reaper' and '102' MPH marker. Text highlights 'Identity & Design' and details about a custom skull grille, '102' MPH marker as the fastest pitch, and 'Reaper' nickname. Color palette includes imperial purple and antique gold, with a black background and a person in athletic attire in the upper part of the image.
Diagram of a golf club shaft cross-section highlighting material science features like a 1.5mm slim performance profile, impact absorption layer, precision engineered polymer, and optimized airway bite plate.
A diagram illustrating performance engineering features of a mouthguard, including perfect bite alignment, superior fit and chafe protection, and kinetic airflow design, with an athlete drinking water in the background under stadium lights.

Then, we put the philosophy in the room where the work happens.
Five mirrors are installed in five iconic athletic grounds: Rucker Park, the Rocky Steps, the Central Park reservoir, Anacostia Drive Soccer Field, and Flamm Field. Privacy film reveals the tagline only when one person stands directly in front. The discovery is private even in public. The mirror doesn't perform. It reflects.

A young man stands on an outdoor basketball court, holding a basketball and a pair of sneakers, with headphones on, near a chain-link fence. In the background, other people are playing basketball, and there are tall apartment buildings.
Two young soccer players in blue uniforms with Adidas logos on a soccer field, standing near a fence and a mirror. One is holding a soccer ball, and the other is carrying a sport bag. The mirror reflects one of the players with a sign that says, "You never needed an audience." The background shows the Washington Monument and the U.S. Capitol at sunset.
A young man wearing a black shirt, black shorts, and a backpack holding a football in one hand and a pair of shoes in the other stands on a football field at sunset, next to a chain-link fence with a city skyline in the background. A sign on the fence reads, 'You never needed an audience.'
Two women standing in front of an outdoor mirror with a cityscape in the background, including tall buildings and a statue, during sunset or early evening.

Finally, we lift the line into the sky.
One night, briefly, forming the sentence in the dark: You never needed an audience. No logo. No animation. No announcement. The sentence appears, holds, and goes dark. The mystery is part of the conversation.

Night view of a city skyline with illuminated buildings, a stadium in the foreground named Acrisure Stadium, and a message in the sky saying "You never needed an audience".
Nighttime city skyline with tall skyscrapers, illuminated buildings, and a modern stadium with a Mercedes-Benz logo. In the foreground, a park with walking paths, benches, and people strolling or sitting. The skyline includes a sign that reads "Ponce City Market" and a skyscraper with a pointed top.
Night view of Santa Monica Pier with bright carnival rides, concession stands, and crowds of visitors, with the ocean waves crashing along the shoreline and city lights in the background. Water in the sky forms the text 'You never needed an audience.'
Nighttime aerial view of Manhattan skyline with illuminated buildings, including the Empire State Building, and the city lights reflecting on the water. The phrase "YOU NEVER NEEDED AN AUDIENCE" is written in the sky.