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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/NIFIREG-2?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel
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Rob Moran updated NIFIREG-2:
----------------------------
    Description: 
The attached image contains the proposed logo design for Registry. The points 
below describe some of the thinking behind it:
* Relationship to NiFi and MiNiFi through the use of the same color palette, 
typeface, and block elements representing bits of data
* For Registry these blocks also represent the storage/organization aspect 
through their even distribution and arrangement
* The 3 gradated blocks across the top – forming the terminal part of a 
lowercase *r* – represent movement (e.g., a versioned flow being saved to NiFi 
or imported to NiFi from the registry)
* Relating back to the original water/flow concept of NiFi, the curved line 
integrated into the gradated blocks represent the continuous motion of flowing 
water
* The light gray block helps with idea of storage as previously mentioned, but 
also alludes to unused storage/free space
* The gray block also helps establish the strong diagonal slicing through it 
and the lowest green block. Again this helps with the idea of movement, but 
more so speaks to how Registry operates in the background, tucked away, largely 
unseen by NiFi operators as it facilitates deployment tasks

  was:
The attached image contains variations of the proposed logo design for 
Registry. The points below describe some of the thinking behind it:
* Relationship to NiFi and MiNiFi through the use of the same typeface and use 
of blocks representing bits of data
* For Registry these blocks also represent the storage/organization aspect 
through their even distribution and arrangement
* The 3 gradated blocks across the top – forming the terminal part of a 
lowercase *r* – represent movement (e.g., a versioned flow being saved to NiFi 
or imported to NiFi from the registry)
* The solid gray (in color versions) and outlined block (in one-color versions) 
help with idea of storage as previously mentioned, but also allude to unused 
storage/free space
* The gray block also helps establish the strong diagonal slicing through it 
and the lowest green block. Again this helps with the idea of movement, but 
more so speaks to how Registry operates in the background, tucked away, largely 
unseen by NiFi operators
* A departure from the NiFi color palette signifies how Registry functions more 
as a standalone application


> Design logo for Registry
> ------------------------
>
>                 Key: NIFIREG-2
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/NIFIREG-2
>             Project: NiFi Registry
>          Issue Type: Task
>            Reporter: Rob Moran
>            Assignee: Rob Moran
>            Priority: Minor
>
> The attached image contains the proposed logo design for Registry. The points 
> below describe some of the thinking behind it:
> * Relationship to NiFi and MiNiFi through the use of the same color palette, 
> typeface, and block elements representing bits of data
> * For Registry these blocks also represent the storage/organization aspect 
> through their even distribution and arrangement
> * The 3 gradated blocks across the top – forming the terminal part of a 
> lowercase *r* – represent movement (e.g., a versioned flow being saved to 
> NiFi or imported to NiFi from the registry)
> * Relating back to the original water/flow concept of NiFi, the curved line 
> integrated into the gradated blocks represent the continuous motion of 
> flowing water
> * The light gray block helps with idea of storage as previously mentioned, 
> but also alludes to unused storage/free space
> * The gray block also helps establish the strong diagonal slicing through it 
> and the lowest green block. Again this helps with the idea of movement, but 
> more so speaks to how Registry operates in the background, tucked away, 
> largely unseen by NiFi operators as it facilitates deployment tasks



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