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Information Filled Under ‘Logo Design’

Logo design Schadenfreude: Anti-piracy organization logo infringes on copyright

Wiki defines Schadendreude as a German word that translates into “pleasure derived from the misfortunes of others” and often involves some form of chronic, comical irony. If there was a case of logo design schadendreude, this might be the poster-child, as French-based file sharing enthusiasts are taking great glee in pointing out. To wit: As a result of a controversial ruling late last year, the French government tabled a series of copyright centric HADOPI laws, the lofty goals of which are “promoting the distribution and protection of creative works on the internet”

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Logo design Schadenfreude: Anti-piracy organization logo infringes on copyright

Picasso’s Guernica in 3D

Gonna bring a little high-brow stuff to the proceedings this morning and take a look at this remarkable animation of an equally remarkable work of art. Picasso’s Guernica is one of my favorite paintings (a reproduction hangs in my living room) so I found this 3D ‘exploration’ particularly stunning and as an example of computer animation, brilliantly executed. Created as part of a Master in 3D computer Animation thesis at the University of Georgia by animator Lena Gieseke several years ago, the short movie adds an entire new dimension (three actually) to the masterpiece.

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Picasso’s Guernica in 3D

Children designers on design contest & crowdsourcing sites?

My position, and that of many in the design community, is that spec work and design contests amount to nothing more than unpaid labor. Designer after designer pitching logos, website designs, brochures and what have you, all in the hopes of getting paid. Something.

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Children designers on design contest & crowdsourcing sites?

Studio Culture

Here’s a brief look inside one of my latest graphic design reads: Studio Culture: The secret life of the graphic design studio . Edited by Tony Brook and Adrian Shaughnessy, here’s the blurb: Studio Culture provides a unique glimpse into the inner workings of 28 leading graphic design studios. In a series of penetrating interviews, the secret life of the studio is revealed, and the mechanics of building and maintaining a vibrant studio culture are laid bare with disarming frankness.

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Studio Culture

5 Branding Basics Every Logo Designer Should Know

While many articles try to dissect the process of designing a logo itself, I will attempt to share tips from my experiences with branding-focused logo design for the real world. Photo by lpwines With the surge of “stock” logos, the quality of branding for new companies is literally going downhill. Many new designers fail to see that a logo, unlike any other design element, is literally the face of a company, and hence attached to a much larger beast

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5 Branding Basics Every Logo Designer Should Know

Numbers – The ever-shifting realities of crowdsourcing and design contest sites.

Criticize spec work, design contests or crowdsourcing sites, and you run the risk of being called a snooty designer , a gatekeeper, a parnoid bedwetter, a high-maintenance whiny art baby. Or worse. Being opposed to designers (mostly younger ones, often from developing nations) working without pay means you are a dinosaur, unwilling, or unable, to adapt to the ‘new reality’ of the graphic design industry

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Numbers – The ever-shifting realities of crowdsourcing and design contest sites.

Logo Design Love. A totally impartial book review.

When I first learned about David Airey ’s then in-progress book Logo Design Love. (named after his excellent design blog of the same name) I’ll admit to feeling a slight twinge of envy. Dammit, I’ve been trying to write a book on logo design for years, but finding it rather exasperating, it remains firmly entrenched in my ‘things to get around to whenever I have the time or inclination’.

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Logo Design Love. A totally impartial book review.

The Designful Company

The following passage is excerpted from Marty Neumeier’s latest book, The Designful Company: How to build a culture of nonstop innovation . Imagine a crazy world where what you learned in business school is either upside down or backwards—where customers control the company, jobs are avenues of self-expression, the barriers to competition are out of your control, strangers design your products, fewer features are better, advertising drives customers away, demographics are beside the point, whatever you sell you take back, best practices are obsolete at birth; where meaning talks, money walks, and stability is fantasy; where talent trumps obedience, imagination beats knowledge, and empathy trounces logic. If you’ve been paying close enough attention, you don’t have to imagine this Alice-in-Wonderland scenario

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The Designful Company

Bay Area Wedding Photographer – Letterpress Business Cards

Tim Sohn , a wonderful SF photographer, just sent us these incredible photos and these very kind words about the business cards and stationery we just designed and printed for him. “’Wow! This is nice!’ That’s the reaction I get every time I hand out one of these beautiful letterpress business cards designed by Zida Borcich over at Studio Z Mendocino

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Bay Area Wedding Photographer – Letterpress Business Cards

Defending crowdsourcing & design contests. The platitudes of spec work.

If you’ve been following the design and advertising industry news over the past month or so, you’ve probably bumped into someone sqwaking about the CP+B (Crispin, Porter & Bogusky) crowdsourced project for the Brammo company, creator of the Enteria electric ‘power bike’. If not, let’s recap quickly.

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Defending crowdsourcing & design contests. The platitudes of spec work.

Sage Werx IT Consulting Logo Design

Client Name: SageWerx Logo Category: Graphic Design Logos Logo Type: Iconic Logos Client Location: Waldorf, MD 20601 ( Maryland Logo Design ) Project Type: Gold Logo Package Project Cost: $497 Project Summary: The client owned a small technology consulting firm that provides enterprise technology consulting services to large system integrators. He wanted his image to be corporate yet eye catching

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Sage Werx IT Consulting Logo Design

Acoustiguide Museum Guide Logo Design

Disclaimer Acoustiguide creates interactive museum guides for museums, art galleries, heritage sites and other public displays. Starting with it’s first recorded guide in 1957, a tour of Hyde Park narrated by Eleanor Roosevelt, Acoustiguide’s current products are solid state and include keypads to allow visitors to choose content appropriate to their current location in the exhibit as well as additional material as well as multimedia and video units. The Acoustiguide logo design is a line art based logo depicting a human face formed by brush strokes seemly written by a child.

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Acoustiguide Museum Guide Logo Design

ABC Logo Design | American Broadcasting Company Logo

Disclaimer The ABC (American Broadcasting Company) company logo is quite a simple iconic logo design . The ABC logo, being a media logo , still retains it’s simple font treatment enclosed by a circle back from 1979. ABC went through various phases of logo design starting in 1943 right up to the 3D ABC HD logo that it sports on it’s website now.

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ABC Logo Design | American Broadcasting Company Logo

Kelowna logo design dust-up

Little bit of a dustup going up Kelowna way in British Columbia, thanks to the city’s newly unveiled logo. The design, part of an $80,000 rebranding project, was warmly received by city council members until it was suggested that the supposedly pine-cone inspired logo looked awfully similar to a logo designed a few years back for a US real estate company called Sunhaven , by another US company called Lend Design .

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Kelowna logo design dust-up

Hiring a designer: a client’s perspective

Image copyright: nerovivo Here follows a guest post by Aditya Mahesh of AMBeat.com , a blog offering resources for entrepreneurs — advice, start-up profiles, interviews, news analysis, and more . Now I’ve never been a graphic designer (my background’s in copywriting), but by hiring designers on numerous occasions I’ve gained insights from the customer-side that will help you satisfy your own clients. The following tips will help you keep your customers coming back

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Hiring a designer: a client’s perspective

Practical how-to business advice for the freelance designer

One of the cooler features on being on Twitter ( follow us here ) is that you’ll bump into like-minded people that you otherwise might not have had the opportunity. Such was the case with my running into Jeremy Tuber ( follow him here ), an Arizona-based graphic designer who runs the very-appropriately named website , Being a Starving Artist Sucks (indeed it does)

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Practical how-to business advice for the freelance designer

To my lovely wife – thank you

If you’ll indulge a personal post for a few minutes, I’d like to take a few moments to send my lovely wife Sue , a simple, but heartfelt, “Thank You” on our anniversary. Sue and I have been married for four years today (the picture above is from our post-wedding reception at the house and yes, that’s our infamous pond in the background). Four years may not seem like a lot of time, but we lived together for over ten years before that, only deciding to make things “official” in August of 2006

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To my lovely wife – thank you

A really, really SPECtacular series of links…

Rather than dying the death that pro-spec advocates predicted, the debate about spec work, so-called “design crowdsourcing” and design contest sites seems to be heating up across the internet, as more and more designers become aware of the issue, with many seeing it as a threat to the graphic design profession itself. On the pro-spec side, there are a few more design contest companies rolling out their websites, presumably as more people figure getting a whole load of designers to work for free and selling the work to their clients is an awesome business plan. With summer vacation schedules, working on our new logo , retooling our website and focusing our brand , I’ve sorta been out of the loop for a month or so and thought a trip around the webs might be just what the doctor ordered.

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A really, really SPECtacular series of links…

And now, onto the website design

If you’ve been following our blog over the past few months, you’ll know that we’re planning a logo makeover and new brand roll out for The Logo Factory . In fact, we chronicled the development of our new logo starting here , continuing here , and then finishing up with the ‘final chapter’ here . Long and short of it – we’ve decided to lose the famous TLF house (even though it’s been with us for a while ) and use a simple font-driven design and a cog element.

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And now, onto the website design

Role of Sports Logo Design

Have you ever wondered why every business establishment spends millions of dollars in sponsoring one or the other sport or game? You probably not!  Every major or minor company, whether it be a manufacturer of a consumer product or a service provider, inevitably supports a sports team or club, a mere local, state level, national level or international level team or club, depending on its financial stand! According to www.livemint.com, sports sponsorship is on the most buoyant areas of marketing in recent years.  The autos (motor car manufacturers) and financial services (banks, insurance companies, etc.) are the two of the biggest sectors of financial support for sport, spending millions of dollars on the sports events they sponsor

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Role of Sports Logo Design