Categories: Creators

Satya Swagat on Animation, Light, and Finding the Human Story Behind Every Frame

In a world where festive feeds are filled with glitter and sales, Satya Swagat (aka @logokuhe) reminds us that real Diwali magic glows in the quiet – in memory, light, and emotion.

An animation creator whose reels feel like short films, Satya doesn’t just draw characters – he draws feelings. Each frame tells a story, blending colour with compassion, nostalgia with nuance.

This Diwali, as part of Social Nation’s #AdsCanWait campaign, Satya reflects on what makes his art – and the festival – truly luminous.

From Curiosity to Canvas

Like most creators, Satya didn’t start with a plan – he started with curiosity.

“I began posting just for fun, with zero idea it would become something bigger. Over time, those small experiments became my full-time passion. That’s how @logokuhe was born – more out of curiosity than calculation.”

Today, that curiosity has evolved into a signature style: emotional yet whimsical, deeply human yet visually imaginative.

The Heart Behind the Frame

“I grew up fascinated by emotional TV commercials – those few seconds that could make you feel so much.”

When he noticed a creative fatigue in short, relatable content online, Satya decided to do the opposite: tell stories that feel. Through animation, he found a way to translate ordinary emotions into extraordinary visuals.

“For me, it’s about finding poetry in the ordinary – a sigh, a pause, a streetlight. Even the smallest gestures carry emotion.

The Diwali Within

When asked what inspires him about Diwali, Satya doesn’t talk about fireworks – he talks about warmth.

“What really inspires me is the togetherness. Festivals somehow pause the chaos and make space for connection – that moment when everyone slows down, shares a laugh, and forgets deadlines.”

That emotional stillness, that pause, often finds its way into his work.

He dreams of animating how Diwali looks across India:

“Like how Marathi kids build killas, and in Odisha, where I’m from, we burn jute sticks to call our ancestors. Every region celebrates the same light, just in a different colour.”

Animating Light

For Satya, “light” isn’t just a visual device, it’s a metaphor.

“A follower once messaged me saying, ‘Your post from 2022 still gives me motivation whenever I feel lost.’ That felt like light – a reminder that something I created years ago could still reach someone today.”

In his world, light isn’t decorative; it’s emotional. It’s what travels between people through stories, even when we don’t realize it.

The Balance Between Art and Authenticity

In a festive season dominated by brand campaigns, Satya believes storytelling should always come first.

“No one wants to watch an ad, but everyone loves a good story. If your story connects, the brand finds its way in naturally. #AdsCanWait is that reminder – make something human before it’s promotional.”

That philosophy is exactly what keeps his work timeless – it doesn’t shout, it stays.

An Inner Diwali

If he could animate one scene to capture the spirit of the festival, Satya already knows what it would be.

“It would be a story about the inner Diwali we all experience – where we keep fighting our personal darkness, hoping our light will eventually outshine it. I’d want it to leave people with peace – that the smallest light within us is enough to begin again.”

In his words, Diwali isn’t just outside; it’s happening quietly inside us all.

A Final Reflection

Festivals often make us reflect on how far we’ve come – and Satya’s journey feels like proof that creativity doesn’t need to be loud to be powerful. It can be soft, intentional, and deeply personal.

As he says,

“Festivals make you pause – reflect on how far you’ve come – but also refill your creative energy. I usually end up creating something during that pause.”

And that’s what makes Satya’s work – and this campaign – so meaningful: the reminder that even in a world of endless ads, stories like his still shine the brightest.

Diya Bhansali Senior Executive - Social Media
Hi, I’m Diya - chai over coffee, Jaipur-born, Mumbai-bound. I write about creators, culture, and all the Internet chaos that comes with it.
Diya Bhansali

Hi, I’m Diya - a 23-year-old writer, chai girl, and full-time Gen-Z hustler from Jaipur (aka Gulabi Nagri) who’s slowly but surely making Mumbai happen. I started off as a freelance writer and somewhere along the way, fell headfirst into the world of creators, influencers, and the chaotic magic of the internet. Passion’s always been my north star - everything else just follows. If I’m not writing, I’m probably overthinking a caption, romanticising a trend, or sending memes at odd hours. You’ll find a little humour, a little heart, and a lot of scroll-stopping pop culture in everything I write.

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