Moze
Active Member
I agree on the coloring. The coloring wasn't Phillip's doing. I picked the colors from a Pantone chart. On the chart I liked them, but on the logo, against various backgrounds, etc., it looks more pastel then it did on the Pantone chart. The colors are being changed to some that Phillip originally recommended.
I also agree on the "seamstress"/"tailors"/"sewing" tape. I like it because when surveying, I actually use one of these quite a bit. Wrap it around a pylon support pole, divide the circumference by 3.14, and you can get a quick diameter. It comes in handy for a number of things. But customers might not get that and I've gradually come to wish it were something else. With a couple of small tweaks, I think it's going to convey what I'm wanting it to. So that's in the works.
I'm not a sign company in the sense that the majority of people think of a "sign company". I offer services - not products. I install non-illuminated signs (ADA, post & panel, suspended, projecting, vinyl, FCO's, etc.) and provide sign and site surveys....in other words "Sign Services"...as stated in the name.
I think some on this site don't 'get it' at first because the majority of the members on this site (I believe) are involved in design, graphics, printing, etc. and have probably never done the things that I do (the same as I have basically zero experience in wide format printing, etc.). There are others (Gino, Rick, Jhill) that obviously have a background in the electrical sign industry and understand what goes into a sign or site survey, etc.
So the clients/potential clients that I talk to understand what it is I do by the time they have my business card because I've already discussed with them exactly what I offer. I deal in a niche that most here don't and many never have. So granted, many here won't 'get it' because they don't see how it relates to what they do.
I love the script and the font is fine. None of my customers are going to be distracted by the font or give it a second thought.
The word "Precision" comes into play because I really do try to be as absolutely precise as possible in my installations and surveys. Probably to a fault. I sweat centering and leveling signage to the 1/16th and even to the 1/32. Overkill to most? Absolutely. Sometimes it even bothers me. It's probably a borderline OCD thing. Due to the layouts of some signs, customers have said "that looks crooked". I know with 100% confidence that I can put a level on it and it is dead on. It's shocking the amount of sloppy work out there. I've installed new signage in business's with existing signage and can immediately see signs that are glaringly off-level. I can't imagine installing a sign like that, putting a level on it, seeing it's off by 1/8" and saying "oh well" and not taking the 5 minutes to remove and install it correctly. If I notice - surely the customer notices and cares. The same goes for surveys. When sketching a cross-section of the wall of a high-rise and specifying to within a very precise area where the shop needs to put the penetrations for channel letters due to post-tension cable, air ducts, window mullions, ceiling tiles, wiring, sprinkler lines, etc. - you better hope you're dimensions are correct.
Anyway, that's what I mean by "Precision Sign Services".
I also agree on the "seamstress"/"tailors"/"sewing" tape. I like it because when surveying, I actually use one of these quite a bit. Wrap it around a pylon support pole, divide the circumference by 3.14, and you can get a quick diameter. It comes in handy for a number of things. But customers might not get that and I've gradually come to wish it were something else. With a couple of small tweaks, I think it's going to convey what I'm wanting it to. So that's in the works.
It looks complete and finished, but I have to agree with others here.
I don't see "sign company" or "precision" in this logo design.
Something about the kerning on the type is bugging me. The text, "sign services"... I would have opted for a different font for that part altogether.
They can't all be winners, or appeal to everyone though. But food for thought, it should appeal more to your potential client base than your own sense of aesthetics.
Out of curiosity, and not really related to the critiques here...What kind of signage does Precision Sign Services specialize in? Where does the "precision" come into play?
I'm not a sign company in the sense that the majority of people think of a "sign company". I offer services - not products. I install non-illuminated signs (ADA, post & panel, suspended, projecting, vinyl, FCO's, etc.) and provide sign and site surveys....in other words "Sign Services"...as stated in the name.
I think some on this site don't 'get it' at first because the majority of the members on this site (I believe) are involved in design, graphics, printing, etc. and have probably never done the things that I do (the same as I have basically zero experience in wide format printing, etc.). There are others (Gino, Rick, Jhill) that obviously have a background in the electrical sign industry and understand what goes into a sign or site survey, etc.
So the clients/potential clients that I talk to understand what it is I do by the time they have my business card because I've already discussed with them exactly what I offer. I deal in a niche that most here don't and many never have. So granted, many here won't 'get it' because they don't see how it relates to what they do.
I love the script and the font is fine. None of my customers are going to be distracted by the font or give it a second thought.
The word "Precision" comes into play because I really do try to be as absolutely precise as possible in my installations and surveys. Probably to a fault. I sweat centering and leveling signage to the 1/16th and even to the 1/32. Overkill to most? Absolutely. Sometimes it even bothers me. It's probably a borderline OCD thing. Due to the layouts of some signs, customers have said "that looks crooked". I know with 100% confidence that I can put a level on it and it is dead on. It's shocking the amount of sloppy work out there. I've installed new signage in business's with existing signage and can immediately see signs that are glaringly off-level. I can't imagine installing a sign like that, putting a level on it, seeing it's off by 1/8" and saying "oh well" and not taking the 5 minutes to remove and install it correctly. If I notice - surely the customer notices and cares. The same goes for surveys. When sketching a cross-section of the wall of a high-rise and specifying to within a very precise area where the shop needs to put the penetrations for channel letters due to post-tension cable, air ducts, window mullions, ceiling tiles, wiring, sprinkler lines, etc. - you better hope you're dimensions are correct.
Anyway, that's what I mean by "Precision Sign Services".