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Brand · Guidelines

Guidelines

The rulebook for Leonard's Bagles — positioning, personality, audience, and the lines we don't cross. Hand this page to anyone creating on the brand's behalf.

Positioning

TaglineSince before it mattered.
MissionWe make bagels the way Leonard did in 1974, and the line out the door every morning tells us we're still doing it right.
Market positionaccessible
DifferentiationLeonard's isn't chasing the artisanal bagel trend or the streetwear hype—it predates both and outlasts both. Where other bagel shops rebrand for Instagram or franchise into sterility, Leonard's remains a single counter where the product and the paper bag it comes in have organically become currency among people who know the difference between heritage and nostalgia. You can't buy your way into this; you queue at 7am like everyone else.

Essence & personality

Archetypeeveryman · ruler
PromiseWe make the bagel the way Leonard made it in 1974, and we open the gate at 7am every day — if you're here, you're here.
StoryLeonard opened the shop in 1974 on a Lower East Side corner that hadn't gentrified yet, boiling bagels the old way because he didn't know another. Fifty years later the neighbourhood turned over twice, but the recipe didn't, and the kids who line up now weren't born when he started. They come because the bagel is correct, and because carrying the bag says you know the difference.
unhurriedself-assuredunpretentiousexactingwarmunimpressed

Values

DailinessWe make what you need tomorrow morning, not what impresses on Instagram.
PrecedentLeonard set the standard in '74; we're still holding it, not chasing yours.
LiteracyThe people who queue at 7am already know — we're not here to educate.
SubstanceThe bagel is dense, the bag is thick, the counter is marble — nothing here is decorative.
DiscretionWe don't announce what we are; the line outside does that for us.

Audience

WhoDesign-literate 24–35 year olds who treat breakfast like a strategic ritual and see carbs as culture. They're split between creative-industry freelancers grinding from home and early-stage professionals who've opted out of Sweetgreen uniformity — people who know the difference between a real bagel and a bread ring, and who'll reroute their commute to prove it.
Demographics24–35, $45k–$95k household income, urban core neighborhoods across NYC/LA/Chicago/Portland with rising rental pressure
PsychographicsThey value cultural literacy over conspicuous consumption and believe taste is demonstrated through curation, not volume. Authenticity anxiety runs high — they fear being mistaken for tourists in their own city or buying the wrong version of something real.
BehavioursQueues willingly for forty minutes if the line signals insider knowledge · Screenshots the paper bag and posts it to close-friends story, not main grid · Orders the same thing every visit once they've found their order — loyalty as identity · Researches obsessively through niche subreddits and group chats, mistrusts Yelp and Google reviews · Treats weekend breakfast as the week's main social infrastructure — the bagel run is the hang · Collects and hoards the paper bags, using them as impromptu lunch totes for weeks after
They valueProvenance · Restraint · Literacy · Craft · Longevity · Integrity

Voice rules

Full voice samples live in Voice & Messaging

Leonard's speaks in the clipped, confident cadence of a counter worker who's seen ten thousand Saturday morning rushes — economical, warm, zero filler. It's the verbal equivalent of a stamped receipt: transactional precision that somehow conveys decades of neighbourhood fluency, where directness is respect and brevity is insider knowledge.

Do

  • Use sentence-case headlines always
  • Drop articles when rhythm allows
  • Lead with product, never preamble
  • Name the bagel before the story
  • Let white space do the talking
  • Treat time like New Yorkers do

Don’t

  • Never write 'artisanal' or 'hand-crafted'
  • Don't explain what a schmear is
  • No 'Since 1970s' origin story
  • Don't use exclamation marks ever
  • Avoid 'We believe in…' manifesto copy
  • Never say 'elevated' or 'reimagined'

Creative constraints

Don’t

  • Visual: Distressed textures and faux-vintage overlays that pretend the brand is older than it is
  • Visual: Generic deli script fonts (the curly sign-painter style every corner bagel shop uses)
  • Visual: Exposed brick, Edison bulbs, or any Brooklyn rebrand visual clichés
  • Visual: Stock photography of smiling diverse families holding bagels in perfect light
  • Visual: Gradients, drop shadows, or digitally slick effects that erase print materiality
  • Visual: Over-designed patterns or decorative flourishes that try too hard to be 'heritage'
  • Visual: Pastel millennial rebrand palettes (blush pink, mint, soft lavender)
  • Visual: Box logos or obvious Supreme mimicry that forces the status symbol instead of letting it emerge organically
  • Tonal: Corporate jargon ('community-driven', 'thoughtfully crafted', 'elevated experience')
  • Tonal: Over-explained origin story ('Our grandfather Leonard came to New York in 19XX with nothing but a dream...')
  • Tonal: Hype-beast language that tries to manufacture scarcity or drop culture
  • Tonal: Ironic distance or winking self-awareness about being cool
  • Tonal: Apologetic hedging or millennial question-marks ('The best bagel?')
  • Tonal: Lifestyle brand overreach that positions bagels as identity ('Live the Leonard's life')
  • Tonal: Nostalgia porn that fetishizes the past instead of existing in the present
  • Tonal: Superlatives and unearned claims ('World's best', 'Legendary', 'Iconic since day one')

These constraints protect the brand's central tension: institutional authority without corporate sterility, insider currency without exclusionary posturing — Leonard's earns its status by simply being what it is, decade after decade, and any visual or tonal move that tries to manufacture that authenticity or explain it too loudly destroys the very thing that makes carrying the bag a quiet flex.