jill@jillharding.com or 812.597.4270

May, 2009 Posts

Strong Brand Identities (logo) Withstand Time… Here is Proof

posted May 20th, 2009 in Graphic Design by jillharding

When discussing graphic design, to say you are a fan of Saul Bass is like talking about basketball and referencing Michael Jordan, Larry Bird or Dr.J (Julius Winfield Erving II) - it is a given. Growing up professionally as a graphic designer specializing in logo development (brand identities) - I’ve always admire the designs from the elite designers in the graphic design industry especially of Saul Bass.

A strong brand identity will withstand time if the proper strategic steps are taken care of at the beginning of the development process. The key steps behind designing a successful and memorable logo involves a process which progresses through discovery, refinement and final. In essence your logo should speak to the brand image you wish for your service, product or company to be remembered by.

A clean, clear, highly memorable logo which was designed in 1978 by Saul Bass is a flawless example of a logo designed well in the beginning which has most certainly withstood time. The logo I am referring to is the 31 year old “Girl Scouts” logo. This logo was designed well before designers even used computers, yet still very strong in 2009 . The Girl Scouts logo is widely recognizable from their mission to help shape/empower our young ladies — to their wonderful tasty cookies. The Girl Scouts’ logo was designed with longevity in mind and it has achieved this successfully (plus has been around as long as I have been alive and still going very strong ;-).

We hope you too are inspired with this flawless withstanding the times logo for the Girl Scouts. If this story speaks to you and your company and you’d like to be noticed and be remembered then we at Boundless Design can most certainly help with your logo development project. Cheers!

BD at the Girl Scouts sculptor in B-town

BD at the Girl Scouts sculptor in B-town

BD at the Girl Scouts sculptor in B-town

BD at the Girl Scouts sculptor in B-town

BD at the Girl Scouts sculptor in B-town

BD at the Girl Scouts sculptor in B-town


Whoa Buffalo

posted May 1st, 2009 in Graphic Design by jillharding

The Great Plains are the broad expanse of prairie and steppe which lie west of the Mississippi River and east of the Rocky Mountains in the United States and Canada. This area covers parts of the U.S. states of Colorado, Kansas, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas and Wyoming, and the Canadian provinces of Alberta, Manitoba and Saskatchewan, and into Mexico.

On a trip recently, we traveled along a peaceful long stretch of highway in New Mexico where the Great Plains were clearly present. The scenery was wide-open and absolutely breathe taking. The amber waves of grain, the lush deep greens and the splendid deep browns. To our amazement - Whoa Buffalo. I was ever wowed by the deep texture and varying hues that a buffalo’s outer coat posses. The beauty of natures color palette is ever inspiring, stop and take notice. Design and Color trends are derived from our surroundings.

BD with Mr.Buffalo

BD with Mr.Buffalo

BD perked on a lava rock

BD perched on a lava rock


Why should a logo cost more than your dinner?

posted May 1st, 2009 in Uncategorized by jillharding

Why should a logo cost more than your dinner?

  1. A logo is the very first impression people get of your company. It can make a company appear large, small (whether it really is or not) fun, serious, professional…
  2. A logo needs a long life span. Once a logo is designed it will represent your company for many years. A great example is the long standing solid GE (General Electric Company) company logo. General Electric has the fourth most recognized brand in the world, worth almost $49 billion. The GE logo was designed over 100 years ago.
  3. A logo needs to be original and genuine. A logo should be designed specifically for your company. A cheap “generic logo” may not reflect your company’s values, beliefs and services. A cheap logo may also use clip art which could end up being used by another company and you losing the uniqueness that visually sets you apart.
  4. A logo should be professional regardless of your industry. You would not take a potential new client to Burger King for dinner, in effect this is what is being done with a cheap logo. A logo should give your company a high-end professional image - the WOW factor.
  5. A logo should reflect the time and thought gone in to designing it. One of the problems here is that people don’t always realize the amount of effort that goes into a properly professionally designed logo:
  • The research - even if the budget is quite small, I would expect at the very least to find out who the company’s main competitors are and how they present themselves. (BD discovery step)
  • The brainstorming of ideas. (BD discovery step)
  • The rough sketches. (BD discovery step)
  • The 4 or 5 logo options worked up on the computer. (BD refinement step)
  • The amends, tweaking and further amends. (BD final step)

A logo is the starting point of your whole brand image. The colors, typography and style of a logo will often dictate the corporate look of the rest of a company’s literature from business cards to the website.

A new client of ours unfortunately had already had their logo design done by a cheap logo designer. She had now approached us to help with some design work after the problems they had had with the cheap logo. They had basically commissioned someone to do a really cheap logo, they were pleased with the design and so had it printed on their business cards, service brochures and embroidered on polo shirts. The problem began when they found another local company in the same line of work had a very similar logo. I don’t know whether both logos were done by the same designer, or perhaps two different designers used some logo clip art, or the designer copied the other logo, but either way it was a huge expensive mistake plus placed their company in a poor light. The cost of new cards, brochures and shirts easily outweighed the cost of using a reputable graphic designer who charges realistic prices. You owe it to your company to get started on the right foot and in the end you’ll see the value. Design and Color trends are not produced in a crystal ball. Trends are the result of much observation of the surrounding natural world.