I guess the same way you respond to a forum post without reading through the entire threadI'd ask them to send a picture of the door and other signage/areas around their office. How can you provide good sign consulting without context?
Here's my first idea....
Olive Garden
These kinds of projects can be such a waste of time. So much brainstorming and researching and designing for what, a $200 sign? I have been recommending customers that have requests like this, assuming they don’t find anything in our own photo galleries, to google search and find images online they like. That helps eliminate a lot of wasted time and gets down to talking price, because there is a big risk in all this that your customer will mess their pants over your quote, assuming you charge properly.
You got it! I don't care if I make a cent on this, just helping a friend out and creating a piece for the portfolio.My takeaway from the OP was not that he was trying to make $$ on this order, but that he was trying to cheer up his depressed town... one office door at a time.
I was at the market when I looked at your drawing, your rendering on the door looked a little off but had no way of telling how far off it was.
When making an architectural or any sign rendering, you really want to make sure your scale/proportion is correct and all your renderings. When I scaled the door on your drawing (looks like a standard 80" x 36") then made a box around the sign you designed, it scales up to 16 3/8" x 9 1/2" - or 33% larger than you are calling it out. When the sign gets attached, and if there is a side by side comparison, the sign will not look correct - even IF you called out the measurements. Always render your drawing correctly as that could be the thing the client will get hung up on.
I make it a habit to draw out the elevation and add a scale person, they way the client (and I) can see if the proportions will work as designed.
Ask I think about this one-off sign I'm about 390 - 450 bucks if you bill at 65-75 an hour (does not include materials)...
Trip charges built in but must be within 10 minute drive
0.5 Hours - Client Meeting
1.0 Hours - Design, Send, Discuss
.75 Hours - Order Materials
3.0 Hours - Fab: Wood, rout, stain, finish, acrylic, cut, polish, drill, cut weed mask paint lettering install details, clean mess, put tools away.
0.5 Hours - Install
.25 Office Misc: Bill, Bookeeping, Misc
You can make 4-6 in that same amount of time.
Another thing is, and I think you know this was coming:
Once you identify a room, it becomes a code sign with braille and tactile required. Now, you can have the client sign off any liability on your end and put braille and tactile later if there is an issue... but consider this one thing. You can do one sweet complaint office sign that other business will see, to sell hundreds of compliant signs later. Either way, just thought it was worth mentioning.
Also, if this is a code sign then if I'm not mistaken it should not be applied to the door:
703.4.1 Height Above Finish Floor or Ground. Tactile characters on signs shall be located 48 inches (1220 mm) minimum above the finish floor or ground surface, measured from the baseline of the lowest tactile character and 60 inches (1525 mm) maximum above the finish floor or ground surface, measured from the baseline of the highest tactile character.
EXCEPTION:Tactile characters for elevator car controls shall not be required to comply with 703.4.1.
703.4.2 Location. Where a tactile sign is provided at a door, the sign shall be located alongside the door at the latch side. Where a tactile sign is provided at double doors with one active leaf, the sign shall be located on the inactive leaf. Where a tactile sign is provided at double doors with two active leafs, the sign shall be located to the right of the right hand door. Where there is no wall space at the latch side of a single door or at the right side of double doors, signs shall be located on the nearest adjacent wall. Signs containing tactile characters shall be located so that a clear floor space of 18 inches (455 mm) minimum by 18 inches (455 mm) minimum, centered on the tactile characters, is provided beyond the arc of any door swing between the closed position and 45 degree open position.
EXCEPTION:Signs with tactile characters shall be permitted on the push side of doors with closers and without hold-open devices.
Rick how big does the Prop. 65 warning against eating the sign need to be on each one?There are so many code related things wrong with the sign that my hand would cramp up with all the copy and pasting... over here in California, we finally have a reprieve on the lawsuit happy ADA lawyers where we have a certain amount of time (120 days) to fix any issues with an ADA issue. I think Illinois has the same fine as we do, but I don't think they have a time allowance to make a sign compliant.
They are all required to be edible now... kinda like soylent green... they have to do something about the homeless around here!Rick how big does the Prop. 65 warning against eating the sign need to be on each one?
Here's my first idea....