Branding & logo design for Deltan Group

This project was to redesign a logo for an existing company, Deltan Group. The client wanted an icon to accentuate the letter D and show some movement; he also wanted to use bold, conservative colors.

We created an abstract capital D out of a blue arrow shape and a solid red curve with 2 white arcs reversed out of it. Since Deltan offers business computer services in the Windows-verse we chose Franklin Gothic for the logo and contact copy (familiar-looking type family to the MS crowd).

We had a little fun with the branding on business card and carried the theme of movement even further; we added red angles to the right end of the card to let the white negative space become an arrow, with the same angle as the iconic D of the logo design.

Simple, strong, effective branding.

Logo design & branding for Riney Palter

We chose traditional (but certainly not stodgy!) colors and typefaces for this logo design and business branding package because it’s for a law firm.

We worked a subtle star element into the logo; in replacing two quadrants of the star with letter blocks, the partial star doubles as an arrow adding some motion to the icon.

We chose a stylish and conservative typeface Bodoni for the logo type.

To create an eye-catching business card, we reversed the logo out of a solid blue field on the back. The front of the card maintains an organized look with two columns of flush right text and a blue bar across the top.

 

Logo design & branding for Lone Star Furnishings

We created this logo design and business package branding for a client who was looking for something a little rustic yet strong and conservative.

Copperplate Gothic type and the faceted star icon in the circle overlaying a faint rustic script typeface gives a rich, layered look to the branding.

The copper color is a metallic ink and the star is embossed on print applications.

Logo design for Southwest Women’s BusinessWorks!

We created this logo design for a conference and trade show for the Women’s Business Council Southwest. They needed something strong, but not flashy and not overly feminine. We went with a text treatment only — no graphics.

Just because there aren’t any graphics doesn’t mean a logo has to be bo-ring. We varied which letters were upper case and which were lower to achieve an attractive and interesting balance. It’s a little like putting a puzzle together — but we get to create our own pieces!

We chose to eliminate the dot over the i in business because it wasn’t necessary for readability (our brains are amazing at filling in the blanks in cases like this), and would have interfered with the text above.

We like the choice of Mrs Eaves type family since it has a nice delicate quality to its serfis (the feet at the end of the characters) and has a flowing italic, but doesn’t scream lipstick. (This is also the typeface the WBCS organization uses for its logo, so it made even more sense for consistency reasons.)  The black, gray and red color scheme work to ground and strengthen the logo design.

In a word, it works!

Logo design and branding for Thompson + Company

Since this logo design and branding project was for an accounting firm, it needed to be conservative and corporate, but a little contemporary. The layout is symmetrical (balanced like a balance sheet should be!) and the shape of the black plus is echoed in the negative space (white space) between the blue squares.

We chose Futura in all caps for the type treatment since Futura is the little black dress of the typeface world; it can go anywhere at any time and look stylish. It might surprise most folks to know that Futura was designed in the ’20s—the 1920s!

Corporate identity & branding

We carried the boxy feel over to the business package branding and used the blue square as a recurring element on the card.