Emoji My City launches its hometown emoji keyboard with winks to iconic Kansas City

October 26, 2019  |  Paul Cannon

Emoji My City Single Wing Creative

Kansas City scenes from the Kauffman Center to 18th and Vine. Winks to local trends and celebrities. A playful push puts whimsical KC in the mobile devices of hometown fans and visitors alike.

And it comes courtesy of the team that helped rebrand Kansas City’s now-iconic logo in 2013.

Emily Elmore, Single Wing Creative

Emily Elmore, Single Wing Creative

In the age of digital marketing, regionally-specific emojis, stickers and gifs can play an important role in the infrastructure of a community’s civic pride, economic development and tourism potential, said Emily Elmore, founder of Single Wing Creative and Emoji My City.

“We decided it would be best to be a part of seeing the city grow,” she said, noting her firm’s Emoji keyboard is the latest effort in Single Wing Creative’s ongoing “community sense marketing” and government-minded focus.

Graphics developed for the Emoji My City project include references to KC sports successes, hot spots across the city, and simple expressions of community love.

“We really want graphics to capture the spirit of the city,” added Kathy Lu, co-founder of Emoji My City.

Dozens of new stickers have been added, including nods to Boulevard Brewing Co. and Lulu’s Thai Noodle Shop.

Click here to learn more and download the Kansas City sticker pack from Emoji My City. Search for the app as “Kansas City Emojis and Stickers.”

Kansas City is the first Emoji My City community to launch for Single Wing Creative, with packs next set to debut with graphics specific to Las Vegas, Austin, and New Orleans.

Founding Single Wing Creative itself in 2009, the firm has evolved to focus on government- and transportation-related projects, Elmore explained, including strategic marketing techniques like website development, event consulting and multimedia presentation.

Work for departments of transportation in Missouri, Texas, Iowa and Nebraska, as well as such cities as KCMO and Chicago, have helped Single Wing Creative set a new standard for itself, she said. (Non-government clients have run the gamut from Bar K Dog Bar to Chippendales.)

A goal is to create recognizable logos for each respective department — unique designs that provide transportation entities with an edge that allows them to focus on what really matters, Elmore said.

“We are very passionate about cities and communities. A big thing about making cities work is your infrastructure,” she said. “It’s really important to build things that people can use and be a part of, like the highways.”

In 2013, Single Wing Creative worked with the City of Kansas City, Missouri, to develop the open-source “KC” logo and assisted in the redesign of the user interface for its new website.

Their deeper local impact, however, has involved rebranding for the historic 18th and Vine jazz district, Elmore said.

“Phase one, we worked with [Kansas City-based engineering firm] HOK on creating the branding, running the social media, the public engagement. Then we built the website,” she said. “We have kept the Instagram account for 18th and Vine running because we want businesses to continue to get their voices out. We really care about the area.”

Stickers reflecting places like 18th and Vine are part of the firm’s dream of boosting an ongoing Kansas City renaissance, said Grant Trahant, Digital Strategist, Emoji My City, who touted motion graphics, like a streetcar navigating down KC’s busy Main Street. 

“We get to incorporate all the city elements that we love about Kansas City,” he said. “We feel that everyone in KC will love what’s on the keyboard. They are all landmarks and neighborhoods that people enjoy. It’s a fun interactive.”

This story is possible thanks to support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a private, nonpartisan foundation that works together with communities in education and entrepreneurship to create uncommon solutions and empower people to shape their futures and be successful.

For more information, visit www.kauffman.org and connect at www.twitter.com/kauffmanfdn and www.facebook.com/kauffmanfdn

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2019 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    KC seamstress reaffirms gender identities, provides confidence through compression garments  

    By Tommy Felts | September 30, 2022

    Every individual deserves to express how they feel on the inside through their outer appearance, Laura Treas shared; and clothing has the power to make that transition.  “Fashion can appear to be so shallow, but we know that isn’t the case. Our undergarments give someone the look and silhouette on the outside that they feel…

    These brothers brought artisan Mexican designs to the streets of KC; now Pancho’s Blanket is opening a Crossroads shop

    By Tommy Felts | September 30, 2022

    A handmade Mexican garment company led by brothers Jonathan and Joseph Garvey is quickly making the leap from First Friday pop up to Crossroads storefront — announcing the debut of a permanent home for the shop next week. Pancho’s Blanket — which partners with artisans in Tlaxcala, Mexico, to design and make wool jackets, blankets,…

    KC inventor’s untimely death leaves legacy of fearlessness, unfinished vision

    By Tommy Felts | September 29, 2022

    Paul Francis pioneered fitness tech for NASA, commercialized it with Bowflex, then raised $4 million on Kickstarter: How the OYO founder’s unexpected death this month cut his storied entrepreneurial journey short — but left a lasting impression on the people who worked alongside him. Former colleagues are remembering the late Paul Francis as a uniquely…

    Pitches and peaches: Hy-Vee awards $30K piece of the $50K prize pie to family-run cobbler company

    By Tommy Felts | September 29, 2022

    Denisha Jones sweetened Hy-Vee’s OpportUNITY Inclusive Business Summit and pitch competition this week with her ready-to-bake cobblers. Her pitch (and peaches) secured the $30,000 grand prize.  “Every time Thanksgiving comes around, I always crave my grandmother’s cobbler. During the pandemic, I was unsuccessful in finding a cobbler as good as my grandmother’s, so I went…