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Logo Development & Advertising Design Whether you're starting from scratch, or refining, renewing, or redefining your coporate look, we can help. Just let us know what you're needing to accomplish. Here are some logo examples, a sample of a reworked brochure, a catalog cover, and some groupings of graphics as a package. Below are a couple of hangtags and a business card for a line of specialty women's clothing. Here, below, is a brochure developed for a multinational data services company, derived from the configuration their brochures take in Europe, but reconfigured for stateside usage. The logo and the layout approach were already in existence, so this could best be regarded as a retrofit. It is common for the need to arise to take a format and build upon it, if only for the sake of continuity. Send us what you've got, along with the new photos and verbiage, and we can update your collateral materials, while maintaining your corporate "look."
Here is the front cover and spine of a paperback tool catalog.
The coffee shop sign here is the full color version, and is set up to work as a two-sided, illuminated fixture, with copper-finished pan, plus iron decorative iron elements at top and bottom. The central graphics print onto backlit material, so that the coffee shop's logo can be clearly visible day or night.
These are variations upon the coffee shop logo, all using just one ink color, and showing how different rendering approaches would change the look of the basic design.
These were among the designs used for creating buttons used on high-end Western Wear shirts. Here is a mock-up of a suite consiting of a pocket folder with foilstamped logo, and brochure, business card, letterhead, and envelope with logo printed in ink, to show how the colors would look using different methods of applying the graphics. When creating your package, your specific needs must be considered. Here, the client chose to use simplified black & white art for use on the windowed billing envelope. Typically, anything more than a two-color print job will require that we convert the envelopes (print them as flat sheets, and then turn those sheets into envelopes). Below you can see a mock-up of a design for a home builder's entryway signage for their housing developments. The shield bares the ancient heraldic design of the builder's family. Not everybody's going to have had family heraldry pertaining to their ancestors, but for those who do, the family crest or the design of their heraldry, the way their ancestors' shields were painted, can be recreated, and integrated into a design. Some people have their family crest on their cards, on a custom rear windshield decal, on a wall display in their home or office, or on the cover of a book covering their family's geneology.
You'll note that this is a much different style of art than you see elsewhere on this site, but the idea here was to closely replicate the look of an original scouting shoulder patch for which the art was no longer available. The scouts needed to be able to make new patches, and to keep them consistent with the look of the old patches already in use. Publication/Advertising: |
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