trending upward
The designs are trending in the right direction. Much of the advise you rec'd is valid but I would caution you against any type of equal weight. Every element should have its own level of dominance aka hierarchy. I wouldn't do anything in color until you have a functioning logo in b/w. It is highly unusual that a business wouldn't have situations that their logo isn't used in b/w. ie. letterhead, invoices, etc... You could also consider only using typography without adding any shapes. Creative type style or combinations of them along with placement can create a visual shape without adding lines. Sometimes less is more.
Check out these resources on logo design. You can use these as inspiration and find some really cool stuff that you like and use that style to build your logo.
http://www.brandsoftheworld.com/
http://99designs.com/
https://logolounge.com/
http://www.underconsideration.com/brandnew/
Keep up the hard work... you'll get it.
The designs are trending in the right direction. Much of the advise you rec'd is valid but I would caution you against any type of equal weight. Every element should have its own level of dominance aka hierarchy. I wouldn't do anything in color until you have a functioning logo in b/w. It is highly unusual that a business wouldn't have situations that their logo isn't used in b/w. ie. letterhead, invoices, etc... You could also consider only using typography without adding any shapes. Creative type style or combinations of them along with placement can create a visual shape without adding lines. Sometimes less is more.
Check out these resources on logo design. You can use these as inspiration and find some really cool stuff that you like and use that style to build your logo.
http://www.brandsoftheworld.com/
http://99designs.com/
https://logolounge.com/
http://www.underconsideration.com/brandnew/
Keep up the hard work... you'll get it.