CES020
New Member
I saw something yesterday on a trip to see a client that caught my eye and made me take notice. I was at a stoplight and I was 1 car from the entrance to a couple of stores that share a parking lot. I think one is wheels for cars and one is a floor place. Sitting at the entrance by the road is a sandwich board. I'm maybe 2 cars from it. I'm trying hard to read what it was. I honestly can't read it. I'm squinting, staring, trying to figure it out, since it looks out of place for the wheel store and the lumber store. It's an airbrushed sandwich board. Not only can I not read it, but I can't tell what it even is.
So the light changes, I roll up a little and I'm still trying to figure it out. I'm still not getting it, and then I pick up on one word. "Tattoo". Ahhhhh, it's a tattoo shop. It looks like some great airbrush skills, and I bet the thing looks awesome standing in front of it, but from a sign perspective, it gets a major "fail".
It made me think because so often we hear that you have to have artistic talent to be great at sign making (which I don't have), but I think it's much more than being an artist. While I might not have the artistic talent that person had, I can promise you one thing, I can design and make a sign that would help customers find him. I might not win an award for my design skills, but he isn't going to win an award for his sign skills either, because you can't read a roadside sign from 15 feet away. It was just an interesting experience for me, for some reason. I don't know exactly why, but it was.
I'll swing by there in the next day or so and see if it's still out there. If so, I'll snap a few photos and see if I'm on target of off the mark.
So the light changes, I roll up a little and I'm still trying to figure it out. I'm still not getting it, and then I pick up on one word. "Tattoo". Ahhhhh, it's a tattoo shop. It looks like some great airbrush skills, and I bet the thing looks awesome standing in front of it, but from a sign perspective, it gets a major "fail".
It made me think because so often we hear that you have to have artistic talent to be great at sign making (which I don't have), but I think it's much more than being an artist. While I might not have the artistic talent that person had, I can promise you one thing, I can design and make a sign that would help customers find him. I might not win an award for my design skills, but he isn't going to win an award for his sign skills either, because you can't read a roadside sign from 15 feet away. It was just an interesting experience for me, for some reason. I don't know exactly why, but it was.
I'll swing by there in the next day or so and see if it's still out there. If so, I'll snap a few photos and see if I'm on target of off the mark.