Tuesday, December 6, 2011

I want to provide the most information, but be specific enough to give the designer a clear picture of the design concept I am interested in them creating.|||In general a good design brief should include the following:

1. A brief description of your business/club/charity etc and what it does. (include a website URL if possible).
2. Your company colour scheme or the colour scheme you would like for the design i.e. dark blue & light grey (feel free to include a colour sample or RGB/CMYK/HTML etc/
3. The specifications of your design size (i.e A4/A5) and the file formats you wish to receive the finished artwork in (i.e jpg, png, pdf, eps).
4. Any text or copy you would like included in the design.
5. Any images or logos you would like included in the design.
6. Any contact details for your business/club/charity you would like included in the design.

Specifically for a logo I would recommend you provide the design company with either a rough sketch of what you want the logo to look like. Failing that, ask to browse the design companies portfolio so you can show them the type of designs you like. Also let them know if you want the logo to be text only or whether you want text and icon/picture.

That should be enough for them to get some drafts over to you and you can make amendments from there.

For more info please see http://www.pocketmoneydesigns.co.uk|||Don't worry, if he's a good designer he will now to ask you for any detail that might help him in developing the design proposals.

Supposing you want to send him a creative brief, you'll need to provide him with the following:

1. First you need to provide your designer with the description of the business.
2. Tell him about the background overview of the market
3. What is the objective you want to achieve with the new design
4. The target audience: who you're talking to (male, women, kids, age, etc)
5. Colors, text, number of pages, sizes
6. Schedule and deadline

I hope you find the information useful,
Cristian|||A rough sketch of what you want, with the colors for each area, or part of the design penciled in with arrows pointing to each separate color. Just a reminder, every color you add increases the cost, because a separate design with each color feature will have to be drawn. So, keep it simple, to keep it inexpensive. Make sure they show you the draft before they print it, or you might have a ton of paper, with something wrong on it. In fact ask for a 1 copy print.

Normally you will see a full size design, which will then be shrunk to whatever you need. Look it over carefully then determine your best and least expensive package of
Letter head stationery, and envelopes, and address labels. For your first order of inexpensive business cards, without your new logo, contact Vista.com for free 250 cards. They have those, plus many other great deals with Logos.
Best wishes and God Bless your new venture.|||there are so many information, tips, n Trick to follow while creating a logo....! i have found some links which will briefly describe you on this content! n you would know more Info n get more great knowledge over there on the links...|||I think they need description from clients about the nature of its business and what concepts and ideas is running in there mind about its business logo.

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