Mount Wachusett Community College, in Gardner MA offers a 2-year program for Graphic and Interactive Designers (GID program). The final course in the GID program helps students assemble and present their best work produced in the program. This blog is produced by the GID Portfolio class under the direction of instructor Coni Porter.
Monday, February 19, 2018
Personal Logo Drafts
Here are a few of the personal logos that I came up with. I wanted to get some feedback on them and any improvements I could make.
I like some of these specially the design with the KS written in script with your name tucked under the stroke. Looks elegant. I would play around with that one and find a way to connect the script KS to the rest of the name.
Kaitlynn - The script idea, as Jamaal points out, is interesting. However, I see a strange change in axis tilt between the K and the S. Are they from the same font? If they are, I think the font itself has problems. Or, if they aren’t and you are mixing script fonts… the axis inconsistency presents a problem. But, if you could find a font where the two letters tuck into each other nicely, sharing the same axis, that might work well. And the sans serif of your name does sit nicely next to the enlarged S - possibly on 1 line or 2.
I am also thinking the the top logo idea could work. It looks more corporate, maybe even more contemporary and clean than the swash italic letters of the first idea. And it looks finished to me.
I like some of these specially the design with the KS written in script with your name tucked under the stroke. Looks elegant. I would play around with that one and find a way to connect the script KS to the rest of the name.
ReplyDeleteKaitlynn - The script idea, as Jamaal points out, is interesting. However, I see a strange change in axis tilt between the K and the S. Are they from the same font? If they are, I think the font itself has problems. Or, if they aren’t and you are mixing script fonts… the axis inconsistency presents a problem. But, if you could find a font where the two letters tuck into each other nicely, sharing the same axis, that might work well. And the sans serif of your name does sit nicely next to the enlarged S - possibly on 1 line or 2.
ReplyDeleteI am also thinking the the top logo idea could work. It looks more corporate, maybe even more contemporary and clean than the swash italic letters of the first idea. And it looks finished to me.
I’ll be interested to see which way you go!