For this one, the 'client' wanted a logo that was classy, elegant, and would appeal to high-end brides looking for a photographer.
http://i30.tinypic.com/106kdxu.jpg
How do you guys think I did?
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For this one, the 'client' wanted a logo that was classy, elegant, and would appeal to high-end brides looking for a photographer.
http://i30.tinypic.com/106kdxu.jpg
How do you guys think I did?
Yes this is elegant. the font isn't so clear tho, it says Asayah right?
Also if its a logo you want to get rid of the white BG?
Its cute+simple, and would be suitable for the client. GJ
Im no logo expert, but i like what you have done. looks nice clean and professional.
I do agree though, it looks a little like asayah, maybe you could take a little bit of the length off of the v at the top, move the top curve down some and see how it looks?
I like it. It suits the intended subject quite well. Although at the current size, the flower looks a little complex to be a logo. Was this done in photoshop or illustrator?
Thank you. I'm gonna try what you said, and post the result later.
Thanks. At first it was just the flower, itself. And then I kept copying it, rotating, and lowering the opacity. Then I added some 'stems'.
It was done in Photoshop. I'm not yet comfortable with Illustrator.
Okay, the reason I asked is because the flower looked raster. I don't want to put you down or anything, but it's probably a good idea if you start getting used to illustrator, especially when you're doing logos for paying clients. While photoshop is great, it creates raster, and unless your canvas is 4000x, you're going to be running into problems down the road.
You really want to use illustrator because of the vector format it saves in. I'm not going to get into detail about the differences between raster and vector. But the primary advantage of creating a logo in vector is the versatility. Not only is your logo going to gracefully resize to virtually any dimension (this is relative to the design), you will also have a virtually non-degradable design. This constitutes cleaner edges and probably a better looking logo.
Just something to consider.
I think its too complex. A logo should be simple yet memorable. It should work on a business card, or on a billboard. It should work in gray scale, black and white, RGB, and CMYK. If you view this as a gray scale image you loose all of the details and colour.