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Showing posts with label Logo design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Logo design. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

Top 10 Websites for your designing needs.

1. 99 Designs

Need to have a website, logo or merchandise created for you or your business? At 99designs, dozens of talented designers compete to deliver the best possible design! Simply pick what you want to have made, outline what you would like to see, and launch a contest for designers to compete to have the winning design! Options include logos, websites, apps, social media pages, business cards/stationary, tshirts and hats, and much more! Hundreds of pre-made logos are available for purchase. 

Visit  99designs.com



















2. crowdSPRING


crowdSPRING is changing the way entrepreneurs, startups, established companies, agencies and non-profits around the world buy graphic design, industrial design, and naming/writing services. Nearly 200,000 designers and writers from nearly every country in the world work on crowdSPRING.
Established in 2008, they’ve been featured in The New York Times, BusinessWeek, Entrepreneur magazine, Forbes, Wired, the Chicago Tribune and a host of others. They've also won multiple awards including Webbys Honors, the ABA Stevie Award and a Chicago Innovation Award!
The Services they offer are. 










Visit crowdSPRING


















3. 48hourslogo

If you want a nice logo with reasonable price then 48hourslogo is a site to place your logo design order. They have over 3000 designers and these designers are ranked as elite, expert and beginner. Over 20,000 logos have been designed and the returning customers are extremely high. Thou the minimum price for getting your logo is $99, you can start your logo contest with just $29 and if you like the entries from participating contestants' designs uploaded on your contest, you may upgrade your order to fully paid contest which will give your contest additional days and the contestants will be able to upload more designs to show you. You will get above 50 designs from at least above 100 designers.  


Visit  48hourslogo.com





4. Design Crowd

DesignCrowd is an online marketplace providing logo, website, print and graphic design services by providing access to freelance graphic designers and design studios around the world.
DesignCrowd gives you access to a 'virtual team' of 578,244 designers from around the world (via a process called crowdsourcing) - helping you to tap into the very best international design talent available, at a low cost. Post a project on DesignCrowd and watch designs pour in from around the world (the average project receives 50+ designs).
DesignCrowd uses "Crowdsourcing 2.0" a fairer, sustainable, higher quality crowdsourcing where every designer can get paid and customers can browse our top graphic designers and hand-pick their favourites.
Visit DesignCrowd



Saturday, December 20, 2014

50 top logo designs of 2014

As the year 2014 is coming to an end we have summarized around 50 logo designs that were perceieved as some of the top logo designs for the year 2014.

Comment below if you feel there are other logos that needs to be added.





Monday, June 23, 2014

111 years of Harley Davidson in 30 seconds.

June 23, 2014

With the exclusive announcement of Harley Davidson's 2014 battery powered motorcycle, We looks back at a flip book of 111 years of Harley-Davidson history. 

10 Oldest Logos in the World

June 23, 2014

These are 10 oldest logos in the world that still exists today.

Even before global marketing campaigns, television commercials, and social media, a company’s logo has been important. Over time, as businesses and consumers have changed, most major companies have also changed their logos dramatically. Still, some logos have had incredible staying power and have lasted for decades or even hundreds of years.
The world’s oldest logos have all retained some core visual element, although several have been noticeably altered. Stella Artois, for example, is recognized by several details of its icon. The horn and the star resting above the label are the features continually

Saturday, September 28, 2013

100 logo designs for inspiration.

Creating a logo or any icon memorable is an art of a creative genius with lots of practice. Here I present some of the most creative logos that these geniuses have created. Often People go for free logo design sites and logo contest websites for their company logo but it is always better to go for 1 on 1 with a designer or go for websites which takes your logo order and gives you unlimited revisions. 






Saturday, September 7, 2013

Logo Designing from Basic Geometric Shapes.

As we have already read about the importance of geometric shapes on any kind of designing and how lots of top brand companies use these shapes on their logos on our previous post, I have here put some basic geometrical shapes and its meaning which can be very helpful to designers specially whose first language is not English.

We already know how to draw polygons and simple designs such as square, rectangle, triangle, trapezoid etc.

trapezoid click to hear

Quadrilateral with two sides (bases) that are parallel. It is isosceles when it has two sides that are equal and not parallel, and rectangle when two of its sides form a right angle.

rectangle click to hear

Quadrilateral whose opposite sides are equal in length; the sides meet at right angles.

square click to hear

Equilateral rectangle with four right angles.

rhombus click to hear

Equilateral parallelogram.

triangle click to hear

Three-sided polygon; triangles are scalene (no side is equal to any other) isosceles (two sides equal) or equilateral (all sides equal).

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Free logo design inspiration from geometric shapes.


Everyone knows about the importance of having the right logo. It’s the first impression we get about the company or the individual. The great logos burn that impression forever into our memory banks. Have you noticed though that the most recognized and eye-pleasing logos are the simple ones. Some logos are just logotypes, others get that distinctive look with the help of intricate or more familiar geometric shapes.
So if you’re looking for some design inspirations for your logo, it’s time to get back in shape, into geometric shape that is. The simple shapes that are used as the foundation for all other shapes are the square, rectangle, circle, oval or ellipse, and triangle. Each of them comes with a certain meaning that can be used in design appropriately.
Squares and rectangles are considered to be the most familiar man-made objects that surround us: just think of all those buildings we look at and live in, books, newspapers we read, the screens we stare at. All that helps squares and rectangles to evoke in us the feelings of comfort and safety. In design these shapes are used to suggest stability, knowledge and truth. Squares are often regarded as the most honest and trusted shapes, more so than rectangles.

Thursday, August 29, 2013

Logo Design Evolution Yamaha.

Yamaha Logo Design Evolution

Think of Yamaha and what comes to your mind? Motorcycles and heavy bikes? Actually, the founder of the company was Torakusu Yamaha, who was known for his prowess to produce great pianos. Despite being a top producer of high-quality pianos, Yamaha is also known for its mechanical and electronic products which the company began producing in 1954. The first logo of the Japanese manufacturer was created in 1967.
Yamaha’s logo, like the company, has a fascinating background. The logo comprises of a tuning fork which is a creation of the 1960s. The tuning fork symbolizes their strong presence in the musical instrument market.
To date, the Yamaha logo remains unchanged despite the passage of five decades. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, an attempt to get rid of the famous tuning fork to emphasize more on the name did not pay dividends. The tuning fork was reinstated to its full glory in 1998 and became the symbol of quality and excellence.

Logo design evolution of famous brands Xerox

Xerox Logo Design Evolution


The Xerox Company used to be known as the Haloid Company almost 100 years ago. But in 1938, Chester Carlson invented a technique called xerography which we today call the photocopy technique. Unfortunately no one was willing to invest in his invention, and many big giants like IBM, GE, RCA and others decided not to finance this invention.
But Haloid Company decided to go with Chester and made the first photocopying machine named Haloid Xerox 14. As can be seen in their logos, the original Haloid word which was prominent in the company’s logo before 1961 was completely replaced by Xerox due to the immense success of this idea.
They retained almost the same logo from 1961 to 2004. But in 2004 there was a problem with the Xerox books and it tried to reinvent itself with a new logo. People associated the company only with photocopy machines, and that has been a major problem for Xerox.
The company changed its logo in 2008 to get away from this stereo typed image, by changing the font of the word. They also added a ball which has a stylish X instead of their ‘boring’ X in earlier times According to Anne M. Mulcahy, Xerox’s chief, that little piece of art represents the connection to customers, partners, industry and innovation.


Logo design evolution of famous brands WWF.

WWF logo Evolution

The story behind the panda logo of WWF?

The inspiration came from Chi-Chi: a giant panda that had arrived at the London Zoo in the year 1961, when WWF was being created. 

Aware of the need for a strong, recognizable symbol that would overcome all language barriers, WWF's founders agreed that the big, furry animal with her appealing, black-patched eyes would make an excellent logo. 
The first sketches were done by the British environmentalist and artist, Gerald Patterson.

Based on these, Sir Peter Scott, one of those founders, drew the first logo, and said at the time... "We wanted an animal that is beautiful, is endangered, and one loved by many people in the world for its appealing qualities. We also wanted an animal that had an impact in black and white to save money on printing costs."
The black-and-white panda has since come to stand as a symbol for the conservation movement as a whole.

Logo Design Evolution of Famous Brands Walmart

Walmart Logo Evolution



1962 - 1964

Walmart launched without a true logo. In fact, for the first two years, when the Walmart name appeared in print, the font and style were chosen at the whim of the printer.

Monday, August 26, 2013

Logo Design Evolution of Famous Brands. Volkswagen

Volkswagen Logo Design Evolution

The origins of the company date back to 1930s Nazi Germany, and the project to build the car that would become known as the Beetle. Hitler's desire that almost anybody should be able to afford a car fitted with a proposal by car designer Ferdinand Porsche (1875-1952) -- although much of this design was inspired by the advanced Tatra cars of Hans Ledwinka. The intention was that ordinary Germans would buy the car by means of a savings scheme, which around 336,000 people eventually paid into. Prototypes of the car called the KdF-Wagen (German: Kraft durch Freude = strength through joy), appeared from 1936 onwards (the first cars had been produced in Stuttgart). The car already had its distinctive round shape and air-cooled, flat-four, rear-mounted engine, features similar to the Tatra. 



Logo Design Evolution Famous Brands LG

LG Logo Designs
In 1952, Lak-Hui (pronounced "Lucky", currently LG Chem) became the first Korean company to enter the plastic industry. As the company expanded its plastic business, it established GoldStar Co. Ltd. (currently LG Electronics Inc.) in 1958. Both companies Lucky and GoldStar merged and formed Lucky-Goldstar.

LG Corporation is a leading global South Korean conglomerate corporation headquartered in Yeongdeungpo-gu, Seoul. It was founded in January 1947 by Koo In-Hwoi. LG specializes in electronics, chemicals and telecom products, having operations in more than 80 countries globally.

Logo Design Evolution of Famous Brands Kodak

Kodak Logo Designs

  • Early 1900's. Kodak is the first company to integrate its name and look into a symbol.

     
  • 1930's. Focus moved to the Kodak name and the red and yellow "trade dress" color.

     
  • 1960's. The corner curl was introduced.

     
  • 1970's. The mark retained the red and yellow colors and the Kodak name, but a box and graphic "K" element were added.

     
  • 1980's. A more contemporary type font streamlined the Kodak name within the existing logo.

     
  • Today. The box is gone, simplifying the logo. The rounded type font and distinctive "a" give the name a more contemporary look.


Source: Kodak Website

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Logo design evolution of famous brands (Firefox)

The early Firebird and Phoenix releases of Firefox were considered to have had reasonable visual designs, but were not up to the same standard as many professionally released software packages.

In October 2003, professional interface designer, Steven Garrity, wrote an article covering everything he considered to be wrong with Mozilla's visual identity. The page received a great deal of attention (it was slash dotted). The majority of the criticisms leveled at the article were along the lines of "where's the patch?".

Shortly afterwards, Garrity was invited by the Mozilla Foundation to head up the new visual identity team. The release of Firefox 0.8 in February 2004 saw the introduction of the new branding efforts, including new icons designed by "Silver Orange", a group of web developers with a long-standing relationship with Mozilla, with final renderings by Jon Hicks, who had previously worked on Camino. The logo was revised and updated later, fixing some flaws found when the logo was enlarged.

The animal shown in the logo is a stylized fox, although "firefox" is considered to be a common name for the Red Panda. The panda, according to Hicks, "didn't really conjure up the right imagery", besides not being widely known. The logo was chosen for the purpose of making an impression, while not shouting out with overdone artwork. The logo had to stand out in the user's mind, be easy for others to remember and stand out while not causing too much distraction when among other icons. It was expected to be the final logo for the product

The Firefox icon is a trademark used to designate the official Mozilla build of the Firefox software, and builds of official distribution partners. Although the core software is open source, the artwork (along with the quality feedback agent and parts of the installer) is not freely licensed without official permission from the developers. For this reason, Debian and other software distributors who distribute patched or modified versions of Firefox do not use the icon.




Saturday, May 18, 2013

Logo Evolution of Famous Brands(Fed Ex Logo)



FedEx is one the most widely renowned logistics services companies in the world. It specializes in shipment of goods from one country or city to another. The current FedEx logo was created by Lindon Leader of Landor Associates in 1974. The Rolling Stone Magazine categorized this logo as one of the 8 best logos of the world. The logo has achieved over 40 awards internationally.


FedEx Logo Evolution and Facts:
The first FedEx logo, which was created in 1971, actually went by the full name of Federal Express. This logo showed the words “Federal Express” at a slant. Each word is in a different colored area of the logo. The main reason for the name “Federal Express” was to associate the company with the U.S. Government. This meant that Federal Express enticed employees from the both the US government and the civilian population. This helped Federal Express to catapult itself to the top of the delivery world.
The most interesting fact about the FedEx logo is that it creates an optical illusion; if you observe closely between the ‘E’ and the ‘X’, you’ll notice a presence of an arrow there. The arrow represents the speedy and accurate service of the company. The arrow was formed after 200 FedEx logos were already designed and reviewed by Lindon.
The ‘Ex’ in FedEx signifies different sectors of the company in different colors. FedEx Express in Orange; FedEx Freight in Red, FedEx Ground in Green, FedEx Kinko’s in Blue, FedEx Trade Networks in Yellow, and the FedEx Services in Grey. In addition, the ‘Ex’ of the corporate logo is also colored grey.
The earliest FedEx logo was designed in 1973 by Richard Runyan.

Logo Evolution of Famous Brands (General Electric Logo)

From the invention of the first practical incandescent light bulb to building America’s first Central Power Station, the GE tradition of life-changing innovations was underway. With power and light, GE provided the basis of modern life, quickly redefining everything from the length of the day to our knowledge of the human body through the development of the first X-ray machine.

1878

With characteristic optimism and a vision of future possibilities, Thomas Edison forms the Edison Electric Light Company.



The General Electric Company (or simply General Electric) is a New York based multinational conglomerate corporation. With more than 304,000 employees around the world, General Electric is one of the largest global companies, consisting of Energy Infrastructure, Technology Infrastructure, NBC Universal, Capital Finance and Consumer & Industrial.
According to BusinessWeek, the company has the fourth most recognized brand in the world, with a total worth of US$48 billion.

DESIGN ELEMENTS OF GENERAL ELECTRIC LOGO

The General Electric logo was designed in the 1890s, and was later modified in 2004 by Wolff Olins. Distinctly of the previous era, this landmark logo still superbly represents thousands of consumer products and other services for more than a century after its establishment.
Shape of the General Electric Logo:
The circular shape of the General Electric logo has a timeless quality, while the inner activity near the perimeter of the circle allows a sense of motion and fluidity fortified by the sophisticated handling of the interconnected initials.
Resonant of the Art Nouveau era from which it borrows stylistically, the General Electric logo is featured on packaging and other applications, yielding a very typographical attribute. Due to the classic appearance of the symbol, and especially the neat circular profile, it has an amazingly neutral and comfortable appearance.
Color of the General Electric Logo:
The blue color used in the General Electric logo represents duty, commitment, excellence and trustworthiness of their product line.
Font of the General Electric Logo:
The General Electric logo features its proprietary typeface GE Inspira, which was designed by Michael Abbink of Wolff Olins.

Accompanied with the logo change was also a change in the tagline of the company from “We bring good things to life” to “Imagination at work”.

Logo Evolution of Famous Brands. (Part 3)

BBC logo on reception floor of Broadcasting House (1932)

The Evolution of  BBC (British Broadcast Company) logo design. 
Though the BBC was created in 1922, a formal BBC brand did not evolve until fairly late in the corporation's history. Initially, a mix of straight type or decorative design motifs were used – see for example the elaborate tracery of the initials found on the mosaic floor of the original reception of Broadcasting House (opened 1932).

In 1936, the BBC became the world's first broadcaster of regular high-definition television, but there was still no specific or consistent use of BBC branding – on or off air. Instead, the gaps between the programmes were filled with early test cards or with on-screen announcers.
The first attempt at a proper brand image came in 1953, when Abram Games was commissioned to design an on-air image, probably hastened by the imminent arrival of commercial competition. Games, who designed the logo for the Festival of Britain in 1951, created the logo nicknamed the 'Bat's wings' logo, an elegant and rather ethereal image which captured the spirit of the times. In reality, it was an elaborate mechanical brass contraption, with a tiny spinning globe in its centre – for BBC Scotland, the spot in the middle was replaced by a lion.


The first attempt at a proper brand image came in 1953, when Abram Games was commissioned to design an on-air image, probably hastened by the imminent arrival of commercial competition. Games, who designed the logo for the Festival of Britain in 1951, created the logo nicknamed the 'Bat's wings' logo, an elegant and rather ethereal image which captured the spirit of the times. In reality, it was an elaborate mechanical brass contraption, with a tiny spinning globe in its centre – for BBC Scotland, the spot in the middle was replaced by a lion.
By the early 1960s, the 'Bat's Wings had been superseded by the BBC TV logo within a circle, behind which would appear a map of Britain split into broadcast regions. This set the style for a succession of circular images, which became the BBC's recognisable on screen identity.
The channel's most famous emblem, the globe, appeared in its first guise on 30 September 1963. The first such ident featured the continuity announcer speaking the words 'This is BBC Television' over a spinning globe while a BBC TV caption would appear.


BBC 2 begins

The launch of a second channel in April 1964 saw the creation of BBC 1 and BBC 2 brands, with the distinctive horizontal stripes across the screen.

A big publicity campaign was mounted to launch the new channel, using the rather playful symbol of a kangaroo with a baby in its pouch, with the even more unlikely names of Hullabaloo and Custard (visuals drawn by artist Desmond Marwood). The evening of the launch was famously marred by a power failure in West London, and at one point candles even appeared on the screen.



First color TV

The first color pictures in the UK were broadcast by BBC2 in 1967 when it covered Wimbledon, to be followed by BBC1 in 1969. Then BBC 1 introduced the first version of the now famous 'mirror globe' – a rotating globe with a flat globe as visual behind it. The inclusion of the word 'color' in the station ident could be viewed as a subtle reminder to the vast majority of the rest of the viewers still watching in black and white to buy a color TV set. This BBC 1 color globe was frequently seen in Monty Python's Flying Circus, which featured spoof continuity announcements. 

The 1970s

The mirror globe was revised in 1972 to use a more ornate font, and then from the mid 1970s to the mid 1980s the BBC 1 ident comprised various fonts, but always on the same deep blue background.

Before the introduction of computer-generated graphics, the BBC idents were all mechanical models filmed by a black and white camera. The colour was added electronically, making it extremely easy to change the colour for each new look.

The 1980s

In the 1980s, the futuristic stripy lettering was introduced for BBC 2 (designer, Oliver Elmes). In terms of its manufacture, this was a major departure – in that it did not use a model nor did it exist on film. Instead, the symbol was played out from a solid state device, which could produce both a static image and a moving sequence. The BBC 2 logo animation lasted four seconds, and showed both logo and stripes appearing and then magically disappearing.  This logo was seen in spoof continuity announcements in series such as Not the 9 o'clock News and The Young Ones.

After the successful transition of the BBC 2 logo, the BBC 1 globe and clock were also subtly refined. 

By 1985, computer graphics technnology had progressed sufficiently to retire the mechanical mirror globe in favour of a new computer-generated globe, which showed a semi-transparent blue globe with golden continents and gold BBC 1. Created by the BBC graphics and computer departments, it was launched just before Wogan, a new chat show presented by Terry Wogan. Twenty-four hours later, it introduced a new soap called EastEnders.


BBC 2 got a new make over in 1986, when the digit '2' was dropped in favour of 'TWO' (designer, Alan Jeapes). The ident was animated to show the letters emerging from a white background, or to show the letters disappearing into the background – as was often seen at close down.



The new corporate logo

In 1988, mainly because of growing commercial competition, the BBC decided it needed a stronger, more unified corporate brand image – to be used on and off air, and across all its commercial product. The new image (designer, Michael Peters) looked back to the traditional BBC logo but updated it by slanting the boxes and adding three coloured flashes unbderneath the logo blocks. The latter colours represented the phosphors on a colour television (the primary colours of light).



The 1990s

In the 1990s, Martin Lambie-Nairn's company took over responsibility for the BBC's idents, having already worked on the re-branding of BBC News. And so a new look was unveiled for BBC 1 in February 1991 just before Going Live!. It was a version of the traditional globe, but with a much more distinctive use of the numeral '1'.

BBC 2 played out this focus on the lead numeral with even more distinctiveness, all featuring the escapades of a large '2'. Within six months of the new package going on air, the audience perception of BBC 2 had shifted from that of a formal and stuffy channel to something much more exciting. Audience figures had also increased even though the content had remained largely the same. Although BBC 1 and BBC 2 had markedly different styles, this re-branding brought a clear consistency to the idents, and redefined the impact of on air branding across the industry.

In 1997, the globe was dramatically reinvented through a sequence of hot air balloon images, filmed on location around the UK. Over the next two and a half years, no fewer than 59 different variations of the BBC One balloon were produced. The thinking behind this new on screen identity was to take the consistently used BBC globe image and to reinvent it as something both local and national.

As ever, these idents became a feature of the British media landscape, and were cleverly parodied in the opening titles of The Ben Elton Show.

Another corporate revision

Later in the 1990s, the BBC decided a revision of the wider corporate identity was needed, as the current slanting logo did not work very effectively on screen – so the sides were straightened from their idiosyncratic 17.5 degree slant, the colour flashes were removed, and the typeface was rendered into Gill Sans.

There is a neat symmetry here, as Eric Gill who created this original typeface was also the key sculptor for the BBC on the original Broadcasting House project in 1932, so once again, the past is echoed and yet freshly reinvented.

Following on from the mother brand revision, the entire suite of BBC Radio logos were re-designed in the next decade, to make them both distinct and coherently joined up as one family.






The 2000s

A change in BBC One Controller saw the BBC One balloon image replaced by a sequence of new idents, 'Rhythm & Movement', featuring a new multi-cultural theme, with a range of dancers dancing to different musical styles. Some viewers
accused the BBC of being overtly politically correct, as one of the dance numbers involved disabled dancers in wheelchairs, while other users were dismayed that the longstanding globe motif had been abandoned after 39 years.
After six years, the idents were replaced by a new circular motif, with content much more diverse than previously seen: swimming hippos, motorbike stunt riders, kites, and surfers. Launched in 2007, the then BBC One Channel Controller, Peter Fincham saw the new branding as both a clear recognition of the BBC brand story and of the channel's heritage as well as a new symbol of people coming together – in the way that BBC One brings audiences together.

Further creative excursions around BBC on air branding have included regular Christmas interpretations, often with direct links into famous BBC brands or programmes, such as the witty and playful interpretations around Wallace and Grommit in 2008.

The story of the BBC brand is – like most brands – one of consistency and reinvention. Over the years of its history, it has become one of the most distinctive brands internationally, now used across a variety of platforms and recognised with immediacy and clarity by millions of people around the world.

Source:BBC website