"I'm re-doing a pylon sign for a landlord and they aren't working with me to get consent from their tenants to use their logos. Some of these tenants are big companies like Rite Aid and Dollar General. How do you normally handle this?" See how that is your actual question?
The answer is to contact the marketing departments of each company. You get their branding PDF document and ask if they will provide specific permission to proceed with the project. It will give you general guidelines on how the sign has to look to be within brand compliance and limit your liability. You may or may not need to submit it for final review to verify it's within brand compliance. They should let you know. Then you turn around and tack on the additional costs to the bill because the landlord didn't feel like helping in the process.
By doing what the landlord is suggesting you run the risk of making an out of compliance sign and breaking a potential exclusive contract Rite Aid has previously negotiated with another vendor. While you'd have every right to charge the landlord as you did the job as per their instruction, it would still reflect poorly on any professional sign shop. In this circumstance, I don't think you'd run the risk of getting in trouble with trademark or copyright infringement. It's down to brand compliance and whether Rite Aid gives you permission to fabricate the sign for them.
The answer is to contact the marketing departments of each company. You get their branding PDF document and ask if they will provide specific permission to proceed with the project. It will give you general guidelines on how the sign has to look to be within brand compliance and limit your liability. You may or may not need to submit it for final review to verify it's within brand compliance. They should let you know. Then you turn around and tack on the additional costs to the bill because the landlord didn't feel like helping in the process.
By doing what the landlord is suggesting you run the risk of making an out of compliance sign and breaking a potential exclusive contract Rite Aid has previously negotiated with another vendor. While you'd have every right to charge the landlord as you did the job as per their instruction, it would still reflect poorly on any professional sign shop. In this circumstance, I don't think you'd run the risk of getting in trouble with trademark or copyright infringement. It's down to brand compliance and whether Rite Aid gives you permission to fabricate the sign for them.