jimmysigns
New Member
you must have had someone charge you too much for your race car numbers so you got a cutter to do them yourself....am i correct????
good one :ROFLMAO:
you must have had someone charge you too much for your race car numbers so you got a cutter to do them yourself....am i correct????
Still working.... Getting better?
I know you want to come up with something on your own, but what you've posted just ain't working.
Tell us more about your background. How did you get this assignment? Past experience?
1st thing you need to do is invest in Dan Antonelli's books. Get the Mike Stevens layout book and then read them. Once you do that, read them again...
And another thing that will make any sign guy cringe...don't call it "stickers"... they are decals. Stickers are what you get out of a quarter machine in the grocery store... Decals means that they are worth more, and you can charge for them...
And once you start, any left over vinyl is called "offcut", not "scrap"... To customers, "scraps" ain't worth anything and you can use it on their project for free...
My past experience would be a waste water technician/ courier.
you drove a septic tank vacuum truck?
So is CTS using a printer or cut vinyl? if they are using cut vinyl then your designs wont work "just saying"
I have to post the obvious, especially since you're in CA: no more than 10% of the rear window can be obscured. Having it tinted and then plastering a large decal over it is a sure way of being pulled over. Just sayin'.
If you are serious about learning to do good design work ... subscribe to SignCraft magazine ... and study the work that they show from various sign people.
PLUS order Mike Stevens book on sign design and Dan Antonelli's book on logo design!
Don't just read them .... study them!
Some of the people here I have noticed go for the clean look. But thats a safe approach, you wanna be seen and noticed get beyond that boundary.
I think that's the second time I've seen someone this week defend poor design choices by claiming that making something illegible will somehow help that design get noticed. Busy isn't eye catching and clean isn't safe... it's smart. Some people on here go for the "clean look" because at least the clean look does it's job. Placing a thin script over a white and black checkered background won't help you stand out, it will insure that no one can read your logo/brand/design more than a few yards away. I hope the OP isn't listening to that advice and instead checks out the books and magazines that were recommended.