Posts: 724
Name: Joni
Location: In a state of confusion
|
Hiya D1zi3!
I "took a look" at your logos. The first one you can't really read that well. It's important to make sure your audience can read and/or understand a logo. The best thing to do is ALWAYS keep it simple & direct. The second one is better but it still had that "double take" aura. in other words - you have to really look at it to understand what it says.
I think the colors are wrong. I would not put a red background under the green text. Use a gradient for that background burst with some paler colors like yellow with red edges. And I wouldn't use that kind of day-glow green for the text. If you want a contrast in color try something else. And you might want to make the "fast" word the different color since that is the verb - if "fast stands out more it sends a subliminal message to the viewer that it really is fast!
hope this helps - Good Luck!
almost forgot - if this is for the web - it's fine to use photoshop but logos generally look much better if they are created in Illustrator as a vector graphic. In my opinion, Illustrator has better control and manipulation when it comes to painting with gradients too.
__________________
"If there’s anything more important than my ego around, I want it caught and shot immediately! Douglas Noel Adams (also Zaphod Beeblebro!)
I specialize in Color Marketing look for my blog coming soon. Yay!
|