Logo development – Finalized Design

In my previous logo development blog post I explored a multitude of designs, with different colour palettes, typography and fire vectors. During that blog post I favoured one design above the rest and so I decided to further adapt it and use it to create some more designs which felt thematically appropriate.

After trying new fonts and playing with some ideas I had before I feel as though designs 3 & 4 are appropriate for my logo and branding of my company. The font used feels easy to look at, similar to the fire in the regards of the soft colour and smooth edges, the colour of the fire also works well with just solid black whereas other iterations try to include the same colour as the fire and it feels visually weaker with, and without the black.

I struggled to pin down my opinion to just one design, so I decided to ask friends and other designers which they preferred, the general consensus was actually between 1 & 5, both of which received around 10 or more people picking between the two. After trying those logo’s on documentation, making them larger and smaller, both of them failed the test of where they were appropriate, design 5 in this instance worked better on documents where it was larger, but when shrunk the black lines in the font made it look bold and too loud.
Design 1 also looked good at the size it was in this document, however when it was made larger or smaller it had the issue of taking up too much space, or becoming illegible.

Whilst design 4 didn’t have as many people comment on it, I feel as though after trying to apply other logo variations to documentation it’s  the most coherent design, which is applicable to most of the places I’ve tried to use it.

Overall I feel as though design 4 is the one I will choose as a finalized piece, the new typeface is visually stronger and the flame between both words works better than in previous renditions, also the new colour scheme feels a lot better to look at, the previous palette felt too harsh with the reds and yellows and the new subdued version is easier to look at.

 

 

final final

Further Logo Development

After the presentation during the week 5 workshop, the general consensus behind my current iterations and development was that more variations were needed. Before the presentation I felt as though I had reached my final stages of logo development, but after a more critical approach in evaluating my own work I felt as though I hadn’t fully scratched the surface on what it takes to create a finalized logo.

The different variations were all informed by prior iterations of the logo and were all thematically similar with slight changes in either the typeface, colour palette and composition as well as the shape of the flame.

The initial colour palette I started with felt quite harsh to look at with some variants of the logo, so I wanted to find a more subdued colour which still looked good with the flame, after experimenting with Adobe Illustrators Built in colour guide I found a new set of three complimentary colours which I applied to designs: 8, 9 and 10.

Overall I feel as though I underestimated how complex designing a good logo could be, and so I feel like more designs are needed before reaching a final conclusion. The current rendition I prefer the most is design 8, from here I’ll further explore what I can do with it and see where it takes the end conclusive design

 

CAMPFIRE VARIANTS

Logo Development (Final)

The first logo below was more of a direct translation towards my company name, compared to prior iterations it plays more with the idea of a literal campfire. Overall I feel as though this logo is weaker compared to previous versions, the design for the logs takes too much away from the central focus of the fire, it’s also quite distracting from the typeface too, which I feel works very well with the basic block colours of the fire.

 

new campfire

After evaluating what I disliked with the previous logo I decided I wanted to keep the fire and the typeface relatively similar, the type by itself felt very weak and looked out of place, however with even the small inclusion of the underlining the piece overall looks visually stronger.
As it currently stands this logo is my final piece I aim to use for the branding of the company. I feel as though it stays true to an imagined colour palette and general aesthetic I chose from the start also it  feels visually appropriate to the IP I propose to create.

new campfire 2

 

Logo Mock-Up (Design 1)

After researching colour palettes I figured I would use the skills I learnt earlier and put them into practical use to create a logo for my branding brief. This logo is just an initial starting point as to get a feel for the general aesthetics of my imagined company and their IP ‘Entropia’

Campfire Brand

For the first image I picked some colours I liked and just started to play around with the themes of nature, wilderness, and cold. I like the idea of playing with Juxtaposition, hence the name Campfire and the central focus on on the red/orange colours.

brand mock up

This image is a rough finalised idea, I like the idea of the logo being circular, I feel as though it wraps the information in a bubble which takes away from the distractions of letting the art run further off the page, also it adds to the central focus of the fire.

Overall I feel as though this logo could use some further development to make it a potential piece of work I’d keep for a final hand in.

 

 

Workshop 2 – Colour Palettes

During the second workshop of Semester B I followed a tutorial on Colour Palettes and the importance of complimentary colours within design. For this exercise I started by visiting Pinterest and found images which I liked, from there the exercise continued in Adobe Illustrator and Indesign.

I found the exercise to be more informative than I first thought, and I found myself breaking down every image I liked to it’s Complimentary Colours and Shades. Overall I feel as though the exercise is a good skill to practice, not only does it look visually appealing and professional but it also changes mundane work to something you don’t mind examining further.

 

Colour palette Colour palette2 Colour palette3 Colour palette4 Colour palette5 Colour palette6 Colour palette7 Colour palette8

 

A link to higher resolution versions of these images is below.

Colour palette