Gino
Premium Subscriber
Fountain Pen Collector, here.
Looks like this company: http://www.gouletpens.com/
Yowza........ someone is cheating, huh ??
Fountain Pen Collector, here.
Looks like this company: http://www.gouletpens.com/
Not the most constructive advice, but I tend to agree. If the client dictates the font and you know it's not going to work, it's your job to convince them otherwise. Communicating effectively with your customer is key. If you let the customer dictate your job when you know you could do it better, you're never going to be proud of your work.
However, like the others, I'm hung up on the font but don't have a solid solution for an alternative. ......
I like Neato's contrasting font layout. (I don't like that script, either) That concept can give a nice upscale feel to the logo and offer an alternative type-only mark to the customer.
Maybe rather than using a computer font you could take one of their pens and write out their name a couple dozen times on some clean white paper. Take the best one or the best elements of your preferred ones, scan 'em, clean 'em up, and you will have a truly custom script to offer them.
Fountain Pen Collector, here.
Looks like this company: http://www.gouletpens.com/
Wow that's quite similar. I guess that means it's........back to the drawing board.
Yowza........ someone is cheating, huh ??
Not the most constructive advice, but I tend to agree. If the client dictates the font and you know it's not going to work, it's your job to convince them otherwise. Communicating effectively with your customer is key. If you let the customer dictate your job when you know you could do it better, you're never going to be proud of your work.
I will admit that is probably where the idea of an ink blot came from. However, this is a "custom" ink blot, rather than Goulet's "generic" blot.
Don't do this. Your branding should never look even remotely like another brand that sells the same product.
So, to use Bill's example, what about all the painting companies with brushes? Anyway, the companies are not really direct competitors. My client is a one-man hobby-turned-business. He makes custom high-end fountain pens, whereas Goulet sells various mass-marketed pens/inks/papers/writing supplies/etc. I'm not saying you're wrong, but making someone's logo not "look even remotely like" their competitor is, IMHO, very hard if not impossible. An ink-blot palmetto would look even more like a generic "round" ink-splash.