p3
New Member
These guys beat on this poor boy so much. A few people have given good constructive criticism. Honestly, before jumping into things, I would do some reading on logo types and other stuff as well. I see a lot of people on here that call themselves "designers." A few things that I do know. The human brain responds to serif text better than sans serif, because you grow up reading it in books all the time and seeing it everywhere. It helps with making out letters. Jills design is nice, however keep in mind, people also prefer to read dark/black text on white, not inverted. It's just not natural. The sizing of the text, you want it big, but you need the negative space around to make it stand out and be legible. Keep spacing between things that are different, like your slogan. If this is a sign, you only have a couple seconds to catch their attention...ditch the "and stuff" What is that? How is it relevant to your customer? Like someone else posted, don't do different messaging on both sides. As your company, your marketing materials should be consistant, otherwise you kill your brand. You appear scattered and you lose mind space with your customer. Colors/graphics should be put below text, just natural in the way a human reads, if you put lines and graphics above the text, by the time you get to that portion of text the persons eye is lost and starts to wondering. For height to width ratio when it comes to logo type, I would probably ditch the slogan all together. The most important thing when starting a logo... Design in black and white. If it works in black and white, it will work in color. Once you get a version nailed down in black and white, pick a color swatch that works with what you are going for. Blue being trustworthy - orange being fun - etc. That way the feeling and emotions can be drawn out in your logo. Really put some thought into it... Also, I know a lot of people are dogging on the name, and to me, I think it should maybe be re-thought. Think of a person that doesn't know your business driving by, they see the sign, when you think graphics people think design. A sign shop does signs, so when someone sees that and needs shirts, they may go straight to a screen printer to find out about getting shirts made, even before coming to you.
Just some things that went through my head when I saw your sign. If you want to design a logo, think of what your company is going to represent and try to illustrate that in a mark (this is what most people consider a "logo") that will become synonymous with your business.
Just some things that went through my head when I saw your sign. If you want to design a logo, think of what your company is going to represent and try to illustrate that in a mark (this is what most people consider a "logo") that will become synonymous with your business.