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Mistakes to avoid in Logo Design

June 7, 2011

We’ve seen our fair share of poorly designed logos. We’ll even admit that in our early days of designing we created a few horrible logos.  The following is a list of common mistakes in logo design. Do you fall in to any of these categories?

1. Unoriginal Design. Your logo should be original to the task at hand. The logo and branding strategy go hand in hand so be sure to create something unique and memorable for your client.

2. Vague. Every logo should convey a message to the viewer.  If potential consumers know nothing about your client after looking at the logo, you have failed.

3. Rasterized. Your logo needs to be scalable so you should design it using Adobe Illustrator,CorelDRAW or some other vector software.

4. Cliché. Steer clear from anything expected. Remember, your logo should be memorable for the customer.  By adding cliché, stock-art style images, your logo will disappear in the design clutter.

5. Too complicated. Many new designers try to complicate their logos by adding lots of detail, too many words, taglines, etc.  Keep it simple. You’ll be more memorable.

6. Too fancy. For the most part, you should avoid excessive bevels, shadows, textures, filters. This will allow your logo to be used across many mediums.

7-11. Typography Issues. There are a number of common mistakes that are frequently made when designing a logo. Consider some below:

  • Spacing. Fonts are built a certain way for a reason. Excessive spacing between letters (or lack thereof) should be used sparingly.
  • Predictable Fonts. everyone knows that Times New Roman, Myriad Pro (although a fairly pretty font), and others are default fonts. Try to use something that isn’t default.
  • Crazy Fonts. Don’t use fonts like Curlz or Papyrus to create your logo. Try using simple, professional, legible fonts. (Unless of course the target audience calls for something different)
  • Ultra-thin fonts. Many extremely lightweight fonts may look nice on the computer screen but they may be difficult to use when trying to print on paper, screen on fabric, or embroider. Lightwieght fonts are also hard to read from far distances.
  • Too many fonts. Try to stick to one font-style (maximum of two) in your logo design. This rule is especially true when you are doing JUST the logo design and not any of the other design work.

12. Asking for too much input. Excessive input from your client, his brother, the secretary, your mom, your uncle, the guy in the coffee shop and anyone else who will give you the time of day is well, excessive. Keep the design pure and clean by only involving those who absolutely need to be involved in the design process. (To avoid burn-out, you may also want to limit the number of revisions your client is allowed to make)

13. Clipart. This is simply taking the easy way out. Create original artwork for your client and they will thank you.

14. Unable to be used in grayscale. One important thing to remember about logos is that they frequently will be used in strictly grayscale circumstances. (Faxes, copies, one-color prints) Make your logo as powerful in both color and black & white.

15. Non-scalable. This is one of the most common tips around for creating logos.  Make sure your client can scale their logo. Most logos (I say most because I know there are always exceptions) should be usable in anything from a giant billboard to a 16px square favicon.

16. Not made for all mediums. After working in a screen printing and embroidery shop, I realized how often people design logos without taking into consideration their future use. Be sure to deign your logos with the intent that they can be used on the internet, in print, on a street sign, embroidered on a backpack, and screen printed on a t-shirt.

17. Inappropriate Inclusions. There is usually no need to include LLC, Co. or Inc. (Most customers don’t actually care).  You should ALWAYS avoid inappropriate innuendos or insinuations. They’re actually not funny- just distasteful.

18. Using time-sensitive imagery. If you use a cassette tape, bottle cap, or bell-bottom pants in your logo, you may be slapping an expiration date on it. Try to find something timeless that will last as long as the company hopes to.

19. Selfish design. Don’t design a logo with the goal in mind that it will make your portfolio look great.  The first, and most important, goal of any logo design should be to help your client reach their target audience more effectively.

20. Too abstract. While an abstract logo can be very professional-looking for a company, what does it really say to the customer? “We weren’t really sure how to visually represent what we do or how you will benefit from our services, so here’s a square with a circle thingy”.

21. Copy Cat Logo. There was a recent article on the attempt of Pepsi to take market share from Coke. They practically copied their logo. It, of course, did not work and they were forced to change their logo.

22. Bad combination of colors. Remember, green tends to reflect eco-friendly companies, red and green means Christmas and pink is almost always for girls. Try to match the colors to your target audience.

Filed Under: Graphic Design

Have some fun with Forced Perspective Photography!

June 2, 2011

Did you ever wonder how did they make Frodo look so small next to Gandalf? This technique is frequently used in filmography, photography, advertising and art in general. In order to show the contrast between the sizes of objects in a picture the “forced perspective” technique is used. Some photographers choose this technique for their photos as well and it is really successful.

There is no need to use editing softwares or a professional camera, because you can use your imagination by creating outstanding effects with the right angle of the camera and the way you place objects in a picture. You can create an optical illusion by making your objects look bigger or smaller than they actually are. Make the Eiffel Tower stand on your hand or lean on the Tower of Pissa. You can create pretty amazing and unique shots by using this technique.

See more examples

Give it a try, be creative and have some fun!

Filed Under: Photography

More Web Design Mistakes to Avoid

May 28, 2011

1. Placing Distracting Elements Like Animation or Flashing Items Near Important Content

Distracting elements can draw your viewer’s eye away from your content and make it impossible for them to take away your intended information.

2. Using Little Text Boxes With Scroll Bars To Deliver Content

This one is self explanatory if you have ever visited a site that crams all of its content into tiny boxes. After a few seconds of scrolling at most, many visitors will move on in search of an easier-to-read choice.

3. Choosing Overly Busy Or Colorful Backgrounds

A background that makes it difficult or impossible to read your content will not only drive visitors away but will also give them a headache.

4. Using Very Long Introductions or Animations

This goes back to the short attention span issue. If your intro is longer than a few seconds, many of your visitors will lose interest and move on to another site that delivers content more quickly.

5. Taking Minimalism To The Extreme

A minimalist approach can create a professional, polished look but if it is taken too far your website will appear boring and amateurish.

6. Using Mismatched Graphics

Choose graphics that follow a theme. Using graphics that span time periods, color schemes, or styles detracts from your content and your site’s credibility.

7. Including Too Few Graphics

Very long units of text unbroken by graphics can be as unappealing as too many graphics. A quality website has a nice balance of text, graphics, and other utilities to keep viewers interested and involved.

8. Choosing Graphics That Are Completely Unrelated To Your Content

Filed Under: Web Design

Why is Graphic Design important to Web Design?

May 25, 2011

There are many pitfalls for anyone seeking to have a website developed. Your website is part of your “brand” and is usually the first impression that a prospective client, fan, or recording label has of you and your brand.  Thus, a properly designed website must go beyond coding, beyond the friend of a friend who says they develop websites, or the one person operations that hangs a “design shingle” on their front porch.

Graphic design must play a fundamental part of any web design. It not only is the creative spirit of your site but is critical to the overall branding strategy of a product, business or recording artist. Graphic Design  encompasses everything from back ground images, banners and button controls to color scheme, text style, and graphics.

An ideal graphic design can give a huge boost to your website by increasing its visual appeal, professionalism, brand value and usability.

Visual appeal is vital to web design because it promotes communication of ideas to your viewers by stimulating aesthetic senses and increasing a feeling of connection.

Effective graphic design also lends an air of professionalism to your site. Visitors are more likely to consider your content worthy of reading if the overall website gives an appearance of authority on the subject.

Finally, good graphic design increases the usability of your site. Web visitors often have little patience for complex or confusing sites and will move on fairly quickly. You can encourage viewers to stay on your site by using graphic design to keep navigation simple, making sure your graphics are content appropriate, and choosing eye-pleasing colors and text styles.

Filed Under: Web Design

Branding Lessons from Lady Gaga?

May 18, 2011

It’s Lady Gaga lesson-time again. After all, she is a marketer who consistently goes viral. And her results ring loud: Gaga’s the first artist to hit 1 billion YouTube views. And she’s turned quite a handy-dandy profit: 11.5 million albums sold in two years, including through digital media (where she was 2009’s bestseller, with 15 million tracks sold). Clearly, she’s doing something right. Brand marketers apparently can learn a lot from her cinematic, but approachable, persona.

Lady GaGa’s Branding Tip;

Tell a consistent story. Define a character and vision. Make sure your strategic team knows it fluently and supports it.

Engage fans in conversation. Provoke, listen, react! But don’t just head-nod; offer quality content that people will appreciate.

Connect the content. Keep your story consistent across media. Build relationships with brands/content providers that complement your persona. Discovery is part of a relationship’s pleasure; your personality should be multifaceted, its glint reflecting where the light bounces.

Fish where the fish are. Free content should be spreadable! Take time to produce work that’s contagious: It’s your foot soldier. Let users embed, revamp, comment and share where they want. (This sounds like common sense, but it isn’t always followed.)

Reinvent business. Find a way to seal deals that makes long-term sense. Gaga leverages touring, merchandise sales and advertising revenue. She has sponsored MAC lipstick, designed headphones for Heartbeats by Dre, and is creative director of Polaroid. (She also used her online store as a 24-hour donation filter. For a day, 100% of the profits from Gaga e-merch went to Haiti. She promoted it through Twitter.)

The Po!nt: Write a “bad romance” a la Gaga! That is, find ways to stand out remarkably, and commit to them 100%. How else will you be heard in today’s world?

Filed Under: Branding

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