VT1300-50: Communication Design

the (un)official site to help you survive your first design course. really.

Logo madness

October 16th, 2007 by J

Logo Galleries*
LogoPond
Cool Homepages Logo Gallery
Vector Logo Database

Sample Logo Usage Guides
iPass (pdf) - note the section on page 6 dealing with “bling”
Napster (pdf) - another well designed document
The BIG PAGE of Branding & Corporate Identity Resources
Corporate Identity Manuals & Guides

Rebranding Processes
Carsonified
Brand New

Rants
Don’t TWEAK My Logo

Well said:

Our identity is more than the Mosaic logo. It is made up of colors, typography, images and more, so that when joined together, reflect the personality of Mosaic and its commitment to its customers, employees, investors and the community.

Consistent use and application of these elements is important. We have gathered everything you need to successfully use our identity and put it at your fingertips.

Tips*
8 Common Logo Design Mistakes (and how to fix them)
What Makes a Great Logo
What makes a great logo?

* grain of salt, people. Grain of salt.

Posted in advanced design, branding, general design, identity | No Comments »

Limitations and design

October 3rd, 2007 by J

Revisiting our conversation from last night on the factor that limits and criteria can play in our creative decisions (haiku and such), today I found an article written for the software industry that deals with choice overload:

They created two displays of gourmet jams. One display had 24 jars. The other had 6. Each display invited people to try the jams and offered them a discount coupon to buy the jam. They alternated these displays in a grocery store and tracked how many people passed the displays, how many people stopped and sampled the jams, and how many subsequently used the offered coupon to buy the jam.

The results were surprising.

  • 24 jar display: 60% of the people passing the display sampled the jam, 3% purchased jam.
  • 6 jar display: 40% of the people passing the display sampled the jam, 30% purchased jam.

The larger display was better at getting people’s attention. But the number of choices overwhelmed them and they just walked away with out deciding to purchase a jam. In other words, if the goal is to attract consumers, less is more. Too much choice is demotivating. Admittedly, selecting a gourmet jam is insignificant. Maybe for more important issues, “choice overload” is not relevant? The authors of this paper, however, went on to consider more important choices such as 401K plans, and once again, a clear choice overload effect was found. Choice overload is real. When people are faced with too many choices, the natural tendency is to “not make a choice” and just walk away (probably in frustration). (emphasis added)

The article goes on to discuss how this study applies to the programming community. But we don’t care about the programming community. The upshot for us is that it’s OK to limit your focus when starting a project. In fact, one might deduce that we have to narrow our focus when starting a project, otherwise the project might not even begin. And how do we do this limiting? Research.

Original article (via)

Posted in advanced design, creative process, general design | No Comments »

value of the brand

October 1st, 2007 by J

The value of a brand is created by the public that uses it, not by the company that owns it. Brands are funny things. They make us choose products out of a sense of comfort instead of an honest evaluation. They require care and feeding and nurturing. Most of all, dinking with brands is something not to be done lightly. Because, in the end, brands can work against you too.

James Duncan Davidson

Posted in advanced design, branding, identity | No Comments »

Explore

October 1st, 2007 by J

Take some time to check this out:
www.okaydave.com

If you only have time for one before class, be sure to check out Mondavi wine video. But look around and notice what he takes the time to document.

Posted in advanced design, branding, creative process, general design, identity, people to watch | No Comments »