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hi guys a big welcome to this envato, tips plus course creating professional, logos in an instant my name is Grace, fossil I'm a graphic designer and I'm, obsessed with branding design one thing, that I've encountered a lot in my work, is that clients often want logo concepts, very quickly so they might ask you to, pitch some ideas have been a week or, even a couple of days if they want, something really soon, your instinctive reaction to this might, be to panic and go into creative, meltdown which used to happen to me, quite a fair bit but honestly there are, techniques that you can use to design, incredible professional standard logos, in very little time, Pro design is working within agencies, often use these time-saving techniques, to create multiple concepts so we're, going to take our cues from the pros and, see how you can use this approach in, your own work in this course I'm going, to show you how to create a versatile, logo kit a set of elements that you can, combine in different ways to create a, wide variety of logo designs I'll show, you how to choose a style for your kit, and how to sketch and vectorize designs, for icons and frames creasing the key, building blocks of your kit we'll finish, up by looking at how you can save time, by choosing typefaces that works, seamlessly with your chosen style and, also how to format your logo typography, to make it look as professional as, possible in the next lesson we'll make a, start by taking a look at how to pick a, design style for your logo kit so I'll, see you there in just a moment, hi there so I want to start by talking, to you about where to begin with your, logo design process so let's say that, you get a brief from the client and they, want to see a variety of logo designs, for their brand the first thing you need, to do is learn a little bit more about, the brand and their sector let's say as, an example that the client is a park, service so the very first thing you need, to do is get online and look them up, do they have an existing brand is it, pretty developed in which case you need, to accommodate that when designing or is, it actually a bit sketchy, if the latter you've got a bit more, freedom to explore some new ideas, take a look also at the brand sector and, their competition what sort of logo, style colors and typography are used by, the brands competitors to appeal to, their audiences making notes of a few, common things that you can spot now that, you know a bit more about your brand you, can start to match that up with a logo, style all logos need to be not only, appropriate for the brands industry but, also they need to look at temporary, choosing a design style which is gonna, suit your brand is a sensible first step, let's take a look at some of the, dominant trends in logo design at the, moment to give you some ideas vintage, and hand-drawn styles are still going, really strong they've got a nostalgic, friendly appeal which makes them a great, fit for independent businesses like, coffee shops and small retailers another, style which is becoming increasingly, popular is the low poly geometric trend, these designs are youthful and ultra, modern and they make a great fit for, start-up businesses or technology, branding we're also seeing more cartoon, design Styles emerging in logos at the, moment which add a bit of fun and, personality these would be a great fit, for the right sort of brand if the brand, you're designing for has more of a, formal corporate feel than a style which, uses abstract shapes and color gradients, to give it that slightly 3d effect might, work really well the style that I'm, going to work with in the lessons coming, up is one of my favourite trends out, there at the moment line arts is a, really simple minimal style but it looks, really fresh and cutting edge and it, works for a wide range of brands and, sexes, we're going to work towards creating, these logo designs and I'm going to show, you a basic three-step process which you, can use after you finish the course to, tackle just about any logo design, project with confidence so now that, we've done a bit of research about our, brand and chosen a design style to think, suit it we can make a start on the first, building block of our logo kit which is, creating icons for the lessons going, forward you'll need to have access to, Adobe Illustrator which if you don't, have already you can download a 30-day, free trial of software from Adobe com, of course if you prefer using other, vector software like Inkscape or Coral, drawl, that's fine - the interface will just be, a little bit different but you can still, put the logo designs together without a, problem okay so in the next lesson we're, going to get started straightaway so, I'll see you there, hi there guys welcome back we're gonna, dive right into the first creative stage, of designing our logo kids we're going, to start with creating a series of icons, which are the symbolic or image based, building block of a logo design running, with our fictional brief of designing, logo concepts or a park service let's, say that we're going to take nature as a, broad theme for our logo kit the first, thing that I would like you to do is to, pick up a large sketch pad anything, around a three or bigger is best plus a, pen or pencil so what I want you to, focus on is taking just 10 or 15 minutes, to draw some very rough sketches of, icons so what I mean when I say icon, it's a very simple graphic which is made, up of just a few lines or shapes as, we've decided to opt for our line art, style and the nature theme you can use, these as starting points for drafting, some of your own ideas, so try drawing simple minimal icons to, represent nature elements like trees, flowers birds animals mountains so get, started on that now you may want to find, a quiet spot away from your computers to, get really creative with your drawings, and given the theme you might also find, it useful to draw outside so go ahead, pause the video and we'll review our, work in about 15 minutes time, okay so how is that did you genuinely, take only about 15 minutes to your, sketches or did it take a bit longer if, it did, no worries drawing minimal designs takes, practice and you really do have to get, used to moving on from one idea to the, next very quickly which can be difficult, at first let's take a look at your, sketches as an example here's mine, so can you spot any designs in your own, work which looks stronger than others, you can see here that I've scribbled out, a few of mine which didn't work so well, but there are a few of us here that I, think have some potential once you've, got a few maybe even just five or so, sketches that have some potential you, can move over to illustrator so what I'm, going to do is show you how I'm going to, vectorize some of my own icons based on, the sketches that I've got here if you, want to use your own sketches as a, starting point instead that's fine too, you can also find the final vectorized, version of these icons in the resources, accompanying this lesson if you want to, open those up and have a look at them, okay so for this stage we're going to, need Adobe Illustrator so let's open it, up and once it's open head up to file, new keep that all as it is and then, click OK alright so let's take a look at, our sketches and choose one to vectorize, first sometimes if the design style is a, bit more complex I like to scan in the, design and trace it in Illustrator using, the shape and line tools but for these, line art designs which very simple is, quite good practice to create these by, sight alone I'm gonna start with this, little owl sketch she's pretty cute so I, look first for the sorts of shapes and, lines which make up the design and then, match these to the right tool for the, job so I'm gonna start would be ellipse, tool which is here on the tools panel, inside the rectangle tool menu holding, down shift is going to keep that circle, perfectly proportioned cool, so mark out the center point of the, circle I'll need to bring in some guides, so to do that go to view show rulers and, then drag a guide down from the top to, the center point and one from the left, ruler to, okay great then for the curved lines of, the beak I can create this using the arc, tool which you'll find here in the line, segment tools menu I'm just going to, draw out roughly and then I'm going to, switch to the direct selection tool, which is a on your keyboard to, manipulate the anchor points directly, then to create symmetry I select the, line I edit copy it and edit paste then, right-click or control-click if you're, on a Mac and transform reflect and, choose vertical okay and then we can, move that over into position then for, those cute little BOTS and eyes let's, take the ellipse tool again and hold, shift get that about the right size and, then copy and paste that over to the, other side so as a quick exercise I'd, like you to either download the, vectorized icons provided with this, lesson and take a look at how those have, been put together in Illustrator or if, you have a bit more time on your hands, have a go of vectorizing a few of your, own sketches in the next lesson we'll, look at how you can refine your vector, icons by adjusting details like stroke, caps and color, okay so you might have drawn up a few of, your sketches on illustrator and they're, probably looking really nice but there, are a few things that you can do to make, your vectors look particularly, professional the panel that's going to, be super handy for this is the stroke, panel and this is docked over on the, right side of your workspace over here, or you can find it up in the window, menus so the first thing you're going to, want to play around with is the weight, of the stroke so for line art designs, it's particularly important and often, you'll need to apply a slightly heavier, stroke weight to make sure that your, icons going to stand out and be visible, at small signs I'm going to increase the, weight for the circle and arcs that make, up my hour icon so you can judge the, sort of fitness that works for your own, logo you want designed to look nice and, bold when viewed from afar so a higher, start weight usually looks bit better if, you're creating a series of icons within, the same style you should note that, you'll have to make the weight, consistent across all the designs as, well the next thing to tweak is the cap, of your lines so the cap defines how the, ends of your lines will appear switch, into a round cap I think just has this, really nice smoothing effect which just, helps the icon to look a bit more, professional this is the central option, by all means stick with a straight ended, cap if it looks better for your style, because I want to get my logos more, friendly contemporary look around and, it's just going to edge it into that, sort of territory okay that's looking, good so just these little tweaks can, make a really big difference to how, professional your logos look right now, let's look at the color of this owl now, one thing you have to allow for when, you're designing logos is that in, certain circumstances you might find, that your logo can only be rendered as a, black and white silhouette or a, grayscale image and this can happen when, people want to produce print items like, letterheads very quickly in house so as, long as your logo design can work in, black and white as well as color then, you've got a really versatile logo, design on your hands having said that, most logos look a bit better with a, little bit of color and even if you're, wanting all or part of the design to, stay quite neutral in color adjusting it, from a harsh black is going to look a, lot better first thing to do is to, expand the color panel and click on the, panels, new at the top right and just check that, you're working in CMYK mode RGB is fine, if you're just creating a logo design, but online then expand the swatches, panel which you can also find dr. over, here to the right of the workspace and, head into the panels menu and choose new, swatch I'm going to show you this really, flattering gray swatch which just, softens logos which you might otherwise, set in black so we want process color, for the type CMYK for the color mode and, let's adjust the levels to cyan 53.5% a, magenta 44.5% yellow 42 and key which is, black 28.5% we can name this logo gray, and click OK and now you can see it's, been added to the swatches panel so, let's apply it, okay nice the last thing you need to do, to make your icons ready to be used as, part of a logo design is to make this, image into a vector hole to do this drag, your mouse across all the elements, making up your icon and right click and, choose group then head straight up to, objects path and outline stroke and, finally go to window and Pathfinder and, in the window that opens choose the, first option on the left which is called, unite it's a now you'll be able to scale, your design up and down without losing, the proportions of the stroke okay, fantastic, so now head up and file save your work, as an illustrator file name it something, like icons I'm going to come back to, this in the next lesson so keep it open, if you're heading straight over to the, next video I'll see you in just a moment, hi guys welcome back you'll find, alongside this lesson that the resource, file called icons which has a trio of, finalized icons including the owl that, we looked at in the last lesson and also, a deer head and a tree design as well as, before for this section of the course, you can either work with these icons, alongside me or use your own icons and, apply the same sort of techniques that, were looking at here ok so now we've got, our icons ready we've outlined them and, United them to make a scalable design, and now we want to move on to the next, building block of our logo kit which is, to create framing elements now frames, aren't essential for creating logos you, can easily use an icon on its own or you, can pair the icon with just a simple, piece of typography but in many cases, particularly with these minimal sorts of, logos a frame is just a really nice way, of pulling the design together and, making it look really polished ok so, let's have a look at where to start with, your frames to make all oger kits really, flexible you can create a set of, standard frame shapes that are going to, be interchangeable, and work with a number of different, icons and type arrangements let's make a, really simple example to start with okay, so a frame doesn't have to be a, rectangle or a square it's really, anything that's going to frame the focal, points of your design which are the icon, and the text so I'm going to head onto a, fresh page and use the line segment tool, to create a nice straight horizontal, line across the page holding shift down, while I do that and then copy and paste, that below give it a bit of space you, might want to bring out guys and the, rulers to make sure you've got the two, lines perfectly lined up with each other, and then you can format these to match, the style of your icons so let's set the, stroke weight from the stroke panel does, something quite similar to but a bit, less than your icon stroke quite I'm, gonna go for 13 1 3 points and adjust, the cap to a round cap to match it as, well if you've done that an easy way to, bring over the matching color is to head, over to your icons canvas select one of, the designs and copy and then head back, over and paste that in go to the, swatches panels menu choose new swatch, and ok and then apply that to the stroke, color of the lines to make this frame, work really well for a logo we can allow, for the main brand name between lines, and a little gap below for a subheading, like an establishment year or a motto so, to do that take the scissors tool which, is C on your keyboard and snip once here, to the left of the lower line and then, select him delete the right hand section, of the line but copy and paste that, short line over to the right side to, mirror it and just as we did with the, icons to make this whole thing scalable, select everything and right-click and, select group then head up to objects, path and outline stroke okay so that's a, very very simple example of a framing, element and I'll give you a little sneak, preview of the final product so this can, give you an idea of the kind of layout, that you could put together using this, sort of frame, okay so ready to try putting together, under the frame awesome, so another framing style is to take a, shape and then make this into a usable, frame in Illustrator you've already got, a few ready-to-use options by using the, shape tools which you can find over here, in the tools panel under the rectangle, tools menu, so circles using the ellipse tool, polygons too can look really good and, you've even got a star shape here too, which is pretty fun but you can also, make custom shapes using the drawing, tools yourself so let's say we want to, create a triangle shaped frame the, easiest way to create custom shapes is, to use the pen tool and get very, familiar with using guides so take the, pen tool or hit P and click once again, and three times to bring that shape, together, now you want your triangle to be, completely even so bring out a guide, from the left-hand ruler to the center, point of the triangle and then select, the triangle and bring down a guide from, above to the horizontal center point now, you want to use the direct selection, tool which is a to select the left and, right hand anchor points and shifters, about until is looking symmetrical okay, cool let's format strokeweight, make it a bit chunkier and let's add a, dash of color as well so go to the, swatches panel choose new swatch and, make a gold tone by setting the, percentage levels to nine twenty 384 and, 24 let's name it gold and click OK, then when you're happy with the frame, head up to object path and outline, stroke as with it before okay super, simple and as an example here's how that, shape might integrate into a whole logo, design so here I've used the scissors, tool two simple way around the edges of, the tank and the antlers to give the, effect that the frames being pushed, behind the deer and the type so I hope, that's given you a little taste of how, framing elements can add that little, extra touch to your logos and how easy, they are to make it can be as simple as, a couple of lines or be a shape or a, badge or a border it can have strong, angles like this triangle or have a more, fluid curvy design and each of these, frames are going to bring a different, quality to your design in the next video, we're going to move on to the final and, a really important building block of, your logo kit and this is typography so, make sure you save your frames document, in Illustrator and I'll see you over in, the next section in just a moment, hey there although your kit is really, starting to shape up now we've got some, icons ready and some frames to help pull, the design together but there's, something that's still missing and it's, gonna be keys to giving you a logo, personality clarity and a distinct voice, and that thing is typography when it, comes to typography for your logos, you've got two choices you can either, create custom type which is going to be, completely unique to your logo and in, very particular cases such as if you're, designing for quite a high-profile, business or a big branding budget this, might be the best choice but in general, is absolutely fine to use an existing, typeface it's just dependent on a few, conditions first of all the font has to, be licensed for commercial work so this, means that the typeface designer has, agreed that you can use that font for, designs that are going to be distributed, or sold so sometimes on font sites we'll, see that you can use a font for personal, use or commercial use if you're going to, create a logo for someone else you need, to have a commercial license the good, news is that you don't always have to, pay for commercially licensed fonts, there are some great free resources out, there and we'll take a look at that in a, minute the other thing that you need to, be aware of is that most fonts are only, licensed for you to use that, commercially so if you're designing a, logo for a client and you're using a, font in the design it's not legal for, you to send them the font file they will, need to pay for the license before using, the logo one way of getting around this, is to either customize an existing font, to make it more unique so for example, you might tweak the shape of some of the, letters to give it a different design, another option is to simply outline the, text once you've formatted it and send, this as a vector design to the client by, outlining the font you're avoiding, sharing a license font file itself so, with this in mind the font world is, actually your oyster as long as you're, aware of the licensing requirements and, how to share your final design legally, with your client then you're able to, select a typeface it's going to make a, great team with your icons and your, frames we're gonna have a little break, from Illustrator and have a browse on, why in this lesson I'm going to show you, some my favorite sites for finding, commercially licensed, phonce so you might be able to find, something great for your own designs in, the future there are tons of sites out, there that sell fonts or offer them for, free but I have a few failsafe thighs I, find it always come back to for a, combination of quality variety and value, as well one of my go-to ziz my fonts, calm which is a great site for finding, really cutting-edge stuff if you go to, the hot new fonts page you get a real, sense of the sort of type style for a, new and exciting and starting to trend, but the designers you can also find some, fantastic fonts on and vaso elements and, again this has a very current feel to it, as we mentioned earlier it's really, important for your logo designs to feel, contemporary and relevant and a typeface, that just feels really right for now is, gonna give you that straightaway as, you're browsing these font selections, online you've got to start thinking, about how a typeface is going to relate, to the designs that you've already, created it's got to match the style and, the personality of the icons I feel like, it's just a very natural part of the, logo so I'm browsing on here and I'm, just constantly analyzing the design and, the mood of the fonts that I'm seeing, and looking for commonalities of the, logo elements I've already built so even, though something like Addington is a, really elegant serif it's not quite, feeling right for my wine art style and, actually something like Berg and sans, feels a bit more in tune with the, minimal but curvy style of my icons so, that would be an option to consider I, want to take you over to one of my, favorite font sites which every designer, on a budget comes back to a lot and that, is font squirrel comm so what's great, for us here is that all the fonts are, not only free but they're licensed for, commercial use too which is great so, have a browse through what's hot what's, recent and get a sense of the sort of, type style that you're looking for when, you can narrow down a bit more head over, to the classification panel and choose, categories that make a good fit so I'm, going to choose sums geometric which i, think is gonna find fonts that will, match up well with my existing style, okay so instantly I love the look of, this font which, called acre it's geometric and, contemporary but it's also got something, about it it's a nice rounded friendly, font so we can get a comedian from font, spring which is another really nice site, and you've also got the option of, testing your own logo text from here and, purchasing other weights as well okay, awesome, so once you found the font that you, think is the one then you can download, it install it onto computer and you're, ready to start playing around with, formatting and we'll look at that in the, next lesson, hey guys so I showed you in the last, video where you can saw some fantastic, bongs to use on your logo designs and, once you found a form that just had the, right style that complements your icons, it really does have the potential to, transform your designs and make them, look really professional in this video, I'm going to show you the basics of, formatting typography in Illustrator and, take a look at a few handy techniques, for getting the most out of your type, the first example I'm going to look at, is using the owl icon I crashed earlier, to make a whole logo design for a cafe, business conveniently for me it's called, the owl cafe so here I am with my owl, icon again you can use similar, techniques with your own icon designs if, you prefer for this logo I'm actually, going to use the text as a sort of frame, instead of using a shape or lines and, this is a nice way of designing a logo, if you have to drop in quite a bit of, text let's start with the main brand, name I'm going to position this either, side of the icon and keep it nice and, simple so take the type tool or hit T, drag to create a text frame and type in, the first half of the brand name in this, case owl to format this you're going to, want to head up to window type and, character, okay so let's increase the font size to, get it proportional and then select your, chosen font from the drop down menu at, the top of the window so I'm going for, acre and a medium weight okay cool, now one thing that makes type always, look better on logos is a bit of, tracking which is the space between all, the characters you can find this here, and I'm going to make it really generous, at 3 to 7, let's get our position centrally next to, the icon and pull down a guide to, identify the baseline of the text, and then you want to copy and paste the, text frame move that over to the right, side and edit text to read the remainder, of the brand name, let's head over to the swatches panel, and give this text a bit of color choose, new swatch and create a green swatch, with levels 80 120 949 24 and click OK, and then apply this to both text frames, awesome so said client wants to add a, bit more text than the standard name, alone for example they want to put the, famous before the brand name and add an, establishment date to let's do the date, first I select one of the existing text, frames copy and paste it and position, below the out icon you might want to, pull out a guide to check that's, definitely central from the controls, panel at the top of the workspace choose, align Center for the text, let's also reduce the font size a bit, and pull the tracking down here to about, 250, then highlight the text and edit copy it, but don't paste it quite yet, everything in our design is looking ok, but it's also looking a bit straight and, bringing in a curve in some of the text, it's gonna really frame that design so, to do that select the ellipse tool which, is L on the keyboard and drag to create, a rough circle over the center of the, design we want the text to curve above, the top of the head of the owl icon, now I'll go to the type tool menu and, choose the type on a path tool click, once on the top left corner of the, circle and you've transformed it into a, path so now you can edit paste to drop, in your text and we only need a couple, of tweaks or just the text content, adjust the font size the tracking a, little bit to to about 200, and awesome we've made a complete logo, formatting your text like in the way, we've just done is actually only one, part of creating a strong typographic, look for your logo designs you also need, to consider the layout of the type and, how the text is effectively going to be, mapped onto your design so what do I, mean by that well let's take a quick, look at a couple of examples in this our, Cafe logo example the text is mapped, around a central icon and uses a mix of, straight base lines, and curved base lines to frame the icon, in the middle you can see this as a sort, of solar-system style layout with the, icon being circled by type this example, which uses two lines as a frame is a, little bit different this encourages you, to map the text inside of the lines, making it central focus of the logo the, tree icons are placed above this, creating a top-heavy layout this sort of, type layout is perfect for when you want, the focus to be more on the brand name, down on the icon this example is a, little bit different again in the way, that the text is mapped out as with the, owl cafe logo the icon is the central, focus but the type has equal weighting, to the icon with it being placed both, above and below the deer head the, triangle frame is strong with it been, set in a different color it feels more, like a backdrop to the icon in text, which is still center stage now that you, have your logo kit building blocks in, place you can play around with the, arrangement of elements and experiment, with different ways of mapping, typography onto your logos the way that, you choose to map the text out will, depend on how much prominence you want, to give the brand name as well as how it, fits with the icon and frame that you, choose in the next and final video we'll, review the skills that we've covered in, this course and also take a look at some, tips for going forward with your logo, design, hi guys welcome back and congratulations, is in order you've completed the sim, photo - it splits course creating, professional logos in an instant I've, shown you how you can design awesome, logos on time it's really short by, creating a set of building blocks, including icons phrase and typography, this is a great way of showing a client, lots of concepts with much less time and, effort than having to reinvent the wheel, for each new logo design so let's take a, quick recap of the process for designing, logos when you're in one of those, time-pressured situations first up so, you get the client brief and then you, need to get online and do some research, about their brand and also about the, sort of branding adopted by other, companies in their sector this is going, to give you a pretty good idea of what, sort of logo designs might be, appropriate for the client then it's, time to pick a design style for your, logo kit it saves a lot of time by, focusing your energies on one strong, style which you think will be a good fit, for the client whether you opt for, vintage geometric line art or something, else this is going to give you some, direction for drafting your designs next, up it's time to get sketching some ideas, that icons which are the image based or, symbolic parts for your logo design when, you've got some ideas you can translate, these into digital drawings using a, vector program like illustrator, you'll also need a nice selection of, framing elements to use in your designs, such as lines shapes and badges these, don't need to take up a lot of your time, but these simple elements can really, help to pull your logos together finally, you can add a finishing touch to your, designs in the form of typography you, can combine text with your icons and, frames to create a whole design and, taking a little bit of time to map out, the typography well and format the texts, are really high standard it's going to, elevate your logos to a really, professional level and there we have it, that's a step by step process for, tackling anytime pressured logo design, project and to be honest even if you've, got a bit more time on your hands, following a work process that has, distinct steps is always really helpful, I will mean you don't spend more time, than you need on certain stages of the, project, so where can you go from here well the, logo design world is completely open to, you and I hope this short course has, given you some confidence to have a go, at tackling professional logo design, projects if you're still not ready to, dive into some client work you can have, a go at setting yourself a fictional, brief or try using the process we've, looked at to design logo concepts for, your own freelance or small business, brand try experimenting with different, logo styles different time frames for, completing the process until you really, feel like you're getting into the swing, of it and above all remember to have fun, with designing logos it's definitely one, of the most enjoyable and creative, aspects of graphic design which, admittedly can be difficult to remember, when you're under a lot of time pressure, but I hope you get a lot of enjoyment, out of it and now have the confidence, that you can create amazing logo designs, whatever time you have to spare so a big, thank you for watching and make sure to, check out the other great courses and, tutorials available on tips plus
Logo Design in Adobe Illustrator - 20 Video Tutorials,Making A Twitter Logo Using ADOBE Illustrator (Beginners)Many people would like to make their own logo..
well here i will teach you how to make your own logo..
In case that you dont know how to use Adobe Illustrator, here is a very basic tutorial on how to use Adobe Illustrator.
Lets start with a TWITTER LOGO.
,Ask HN: Can anyone recommend a logo designer?Just wondering if anyone has any recommendations for a logo designer/illustrator for a mascot logo design? Thanks in advance..
,Ask HN: Need any Graphic work done?I'm a part-time freelancer, looking for some small work, I'm trying to extend my knowledge in design and illustrator.
If you're looking for small design work (logo, site graphics, banners, ads, etc) please feel free to reach me.
I charge a small hourly rate, smaller than most freelancers, I provide top-quality designs, and mockups. I also accept PayPal as a payment.
I am not looking for a position in a company, just a small job that I can help pay my bills, etc.
Please feel free to contact me at: shahedkhan30 [at] gmail.com.
,Ask HN: How and whom to hire – First designer?Hey everyone,
I run a B2B SaaS company (5 month old), so far I've been doing the user research/UX stuff, while my school friend is helping out with visuals. So many product features getting shaped and I feel it's high time we hire a full-time designer. After talking to lot of people and reading articles online, I understood there are three types of designers - UX (user research, wire framing, story board, sitemap), UI (design the interface using Photoshop/Illustrator/Fireworks) and Visual/Graphic designers (logo, posters, branding etc.)
My question:
Should we get someone who'll own all the facets of the design? Where to find such desingers and what to test during the interviews?
Or either hire two designers one will be doing the UX part and the other will be designing the user interface?
What would you suggest and why?
Thanks in advance for sharing your knowledge!.
,Ask HN: Stock image as website logo: any side effect?I'm building a website. It is bigger than just a side project. Found an image on one of the stock image sites, bought it for $20. I use this image as site a logo. I contacted the artist. Asked him to make few illustrations for my website in the same style. He did. Everything fine so far.
No I'm thinking about uniqueness of this logo image. The picture was sold for a long time on this (and few others) stock image sites. It is still available there.
Should I get (buy) some exclusive rights ? If I do this — what happens to the people who bought this image before?
Should I just add the unregistered trademark™ symbol somewhere near this image and site name?
Should I ask the artist to modify the image to make it unique? (something like adding one or two letters from the site name, "pied piper" style, you know)).
,I will give an original movie illustration logo design with my creative thinkingI will give an original movie illustration Logo Design with my creative thinking for $5
Hi,
In this service we offer a logo design with a specific style, the monogram or letter mark / letter logo design.
Monogram and letter mark / letter logo is a design consisting of one, two or more alphabetic letters combined or interlaced, commonly one's initials.
Why order from me?
Professional Concept
Unlimited Revisions.
Creative and Unique Ideas
100% Satisfaction or Money back Guaranteed
What you will get?
1000px X100px JPG and PNG files
Vector File
Editable Source File.
We designs logos of all of the other categories signature, professional or minimal. You can order the same gig and provide note on that.
Please order me joust now.
Thanks !
https://www.fiverr.com/kelly_becker/give-an-original-movie-illustration-logo-design-with-my-creative-thinking?context_referrer=user_page&ref_ctx_id=837aa246-e465-42d5-9e4b-5d1e646c4438&pckg_id=1&pos=4.
,Ask HN: How do you, as a developer, set measurable and actionable goals?I see a lot of people from other industries, say designers or sales people, who can set for themselves actionable and measurable goals such as "Make one illustration a day", "Make a logo a day" or "Sell X units of Y product a day", "Make X ammount of dollars seeling product Z by date X", etc.
How do you, as a developer, set measurable goals for yourself, being it at work or in your side hobbie?.
,Roast My Job OfferHi everyone! My co-founder posted a react dev job offer here yesterday and received lots of feedback (mostly negative, yet super helpful).
I hire a UI designer now, here's my job offer, would love to hear your thoughts!
-- JOB OFFER STARTS BELOW---
We're looking for a UI designer who gets chills anytime they interact with a beautifully designed app/product and can spark this delight by their designs too!
About us
We're a creative team of supertalented individuals crafting supreme exp...haha, kidding. We hate this kind of fluff too, let's be short and sweet instead!
We design and build cool stuff for badass companies. Why badass?
No name dropping, but here are a few random things our clients do:
- Measure brain gamma waves to help you get into the flow state
- Build a neobank for e-commerce
- Invest in autonomous aircrafts and blockchain protocols
- Write famous business newsletter sent daily to 2.5M users
We make no promises here, but chances to work on yet another pizza delivery app are low (But acutally you never know, possibilites to innovate are infinite)
About you
First and foremost, UI skills! We use Figma whenever possible so prior experience with this nifty tool is needed. Second, English (B2+, best C1+). You are ready to work in EU time zones, with occasional calls in the evening with our American folks (ET/PT)
Also, you are able (and like) to take the lead. That's you!
Here is a full list of some other desired skills.
YOU DON'T HAVE TO TICK ALL THE BOXES.
UX Research
Building wireframes/wireflows
User interviews
Design systems
Interaction/Motion Design (Principle or similar)
Animation Design (After Effect, Haiku or similar)
Prototyping (Figma, InVision or similar)
Illustration Design
Copywriting
Logo/Branding
Low-code frontend development (Webflow)
What this is not
This is not a graphic designer role who spends most of their time creating assets for social media or funny posters. Sometimes we will need your help with Dribbble posts, case studies etc. but your primary focus will be user interface design.
This is not for UX designers aspiring to learn UI design. While your UX skills or willingness to learn it will be a huge advantage, we want you to be a master of sleek and crips UI design in the first place.
Why you might be excited about us
Work atmosphere. While EVERY company says they are an awesome workplace filled with amazing people, we state it with full self-awareness that you'll love working with our team.
Opportunity to network with founders of the hottest US and Canada based startups
Occasional deep dives into domains like crypto & web3, fintech, biotech, space and much more
Why You Might NOT Be Excited About Us
You should be comfortable with just a dash of chaos. This is not the kind of job where you show up and we tell you exactly what to do every day.
{COMPANY} is a shamelessly pro-startup, pro-tech organization. If that’s not your thing, this place might not be your dream job.
Nitty Gritty
We enjoy remote work, but if you like to work at our office in Katowice (Poland), you are more than welcome to do so!
Shoot us a message below and tell us:
What you are good at
What you are not so good at but would love to improve
Who/What inspires you in the UI domain
What is not your cup of tea
Provide some background, showcase your previous work, and tell what we can do to make this collaboration fun! Btw, if you start your message with the word "bananas" you'll get extra points for making it all the way here:) Also, if you use twitter and hate traditional hiring processes, you can DM us {OUR TWITTER HANDLE} and we will take it from there!
We're excited to meet you! :)
--END---
Salary range, years of experience are listed as well.
What do you think?.
,Ask HN: How do I hire a designer as an indie dev?I’m about to hire a designer for the first time for Readlang (http://readlang.com).
My previous experience is limited to spending $20 on fiverr, see the results here: https://medium.com/@SteveRidout/redesign-my-landing-page-for-1000-kudos-72f0cd57c04a#.3g3uz1i7h
This time I’m looking for a designer to help with the brand, color scheme, fonts, logo, visual language, (optionally) illustration and to apply this to the landing page. I’ve offered $1000 for this in the above Medium post and on https://www.reddit.com/r/designjobs . The deadline is Fri 22nd Jan. So far I’ve had 33 applications, and would like some tips on:
- How to choose the best applicant?
- Is this a good approach?
- Does the price ($1000) sound reasonable?
- How do you find a good designer?
These are fuzzy questions, but I’m interested in opinions about this from both sides - designers and those who’ve contracted designers..
,Dear Google: I'm not a spammer selling things - I'm a buyerGoogle seems to think that I'm a spammer. But really they're keeping a bunch of designers (5 or 6 now) from possibly getting my business.
I'm trying to get in touch with a couple design studios about a web design project.
I'm emailing them via the addresses they provide on their sites, and Google is rejecting my message:
"Message rejected by Google Groups. Please visit http://mail.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=188131 to review our Bulk Email Senders Guidelines."
Is this a spam message?
"[Dear Designer] -- I came across your site recently and was impressed with the worknyou've done.
[My company] is looking to re-do our website and build a small portfolio ofnillustrations/icons that we can use in marketing (and potentially withinnour product). We've already started a "branding/logo" exercise internallynso we're mainly looking for a partner to help design our web experience andngenerate some high-quality illustrations/graphics that help tell the storynof our business/product.
So, I'm interested in learning more about your work with [tech B2B/enterprise] design projects.
About us: [50 word summary of our company]
You can imagine that we're looking for a design partner that understands our product and its value and how to communicate it. Can you share some examples of stuff you've done that might make sensengiven all the above?
Thanks".
,Can we get some feedback for this website – IdeaOnce.com?Design your next visual masterpiece with us. With thousands of professional templates, images and quality content to choose from, get a headstart on bringing your best ideas and work to life.
You can do the following things by using the IdeaOnce web app:
Quotes: Huge collection of quotes in almost all categories.
BG Remove: once click to remove any image background
Pages and Layers
Download 300 dpi images
Create your workspace and invite your team.
Branding: A single color palette, fonts and logo across all of you marketing materials on a single click
Paletes: Try different colors before finalising your design
Illustrations: With our illustrations, you will be able to add a bit of life to your design.
Fonts: IdeaOnce lets you select a font from a list of common fonts, You can upload your own fonts.
Color picker: This tool helps you pick the color from any object present your design
Icons: These are the most useful and unique set of icons. The goal is to inspire creativity with these fun, unique icons.
Drive upload: Upload your files directly to IdeaOnce from your google drive.
Resize design: Resize image to a specific size and retouch it to perfection, in seconds.
Beautify: Add a grayscale filter and transform your photos into works of art. Or turn them into retro masterpieces using the vintage and pop filters.
Split image into smaller grids.
Overall, it's the only tool that you'll ever need to grow your engagement..
https://design.ideaonce.com.
Reddit Images 82
First logo in Illustrator - constructive crits are appreciated ^^ 0
[NO SPOILERS] I remade True Colors's beta logo in Illustrator and Photoshop 1
This is the repost to the design i made earlier, to be specific, this is my seconds logo in illustrator for a company named endless which is a graphic designing compnay, im realy new to illustrator and making logos so i just typed with a font and reduced the size b/w letter (idk wut typography is). 2
Inspired by too many people to credit, but my first attempt at anything other than a logo in illustrator 3
Looking for a font like this to use in a logo in illustrator. With serifs 4
Finally finished recreating the logo in Illustrator! (sorry for jpg format) 5
How to Create Logo in Illustrator 6
Recreated the logo in illustrator ! 7
Adobe illustrator: Create a Gradient circular Logo in Illustrator 2021 | fast and easy | DOT-A-LINE 8
A little help. I’m trying to create a simple logo in illustrator. Is there a way to delete the unfilled areas so I’m left with just the paths that make up the filled areas? 9
Gorilla Goo - Designed the logo in Illustrator-- Wrapped it onto a bag model from Sketchfab in Blender and added a rainbowish metallic finish. 10
Remaking the D&D logo in Illustrator for a class project and this happened... 11
So I tried to make Pacific logo in illustrator 12
How To Create Simple Icon logo In Illustrator Easily By ProgrammingGeek 13
Made this logo in Illustrator yesterday for Lacey's new podcast. Obviously inspired by the original RoL logo 14
How to Design a Logo in Illustrator CC – Illustrator Logo Design Process 15
From several sketches in Photoshop to final vector logo in Illustrator. This is usually how I create my logo's. This one was created for a new local brewery. 16
How to make a bird logo in illustrator 17
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