Skip to content
  • Home
  • About
  • Links
Search
Close

Regina Ball Design

Sketches | Case Studies | Thoughts

Tag: logo design

Logo | Zip

September 3, 2018August 28, 2018 reginaballdesignLeave a comment

Back in January, one of my former colleagues from my agency days contacted me about helping her current company, Calyx Software, develop a logo for one of their new products. It was a tight timeline given their schedule to announce the project, so it was a fun challenge.

Zip is a dynamic interviewing tool for mortgage applications, that makes the process fast & smooth for the applicant(s).

Initial drafts:

Zip-Concepts-1

The client wanted a logo that was clean, modern, and showed movement—something that conveys the speed & ease of the product.

Final logo:

Zip_Logo_Black_72dpi

Zip_Logo_RGB_300dpi

App logo:

Zip_Icon_RGB

The decision was made to keep the product name Zip rather than ZipHome, so that it is not limiting and fits into the suite of Calyx Software products.

I’m really happy with how this logo turned out, as was the client!

Logo | Happify Bath Boutique

August 14, 2017August 13, 2017 reginaballdesignLeave a comment

Wow, I can’t believe I haven’t updated this blog since last year. Things have been very busy at work, including completing one of my largest projects to date, so I have not been able to update this blog as much as I’ve wanted to. But, I’ve still been doing a couple little freelance projects.

A friend of a friend from college recently started her own small business, and decided it was time to invest in a logo. Caroline of Happify Bath Boutique was a pleasure to work with—it’s always easier to work with people you already know—and I’m so happy I was able to design something she loves. I really enjoyed this project because I was able to work on my hand lettering skills.

I started by doing some rough initial concept sketches, and from there we explored three options.

logo-option-1_P1

logo-option-2_P2_K

logo-option-3_P1

From there, I developed a few color options for each one:

logo-option-1_P1_color

logo-option-2_P2

logo-option-3_P1_color

 

In the end, we decided to combine one of the lettering concepts with one of the color concepts, for the below result:

Happify_Logo_F-01

I’m really happy with the final result, and more importantly, Caroline is too! I’m excited to see how she uses the logo as her business grows.

Case Study | Cat Hustler Logo

July 10, 2016November 20, 2016 reginaballdesign1 Comment

A few months ago, my friend Julia, who I met while adopting our cat from the Fairfax County Animal Shelter, contacted me about doing a logo design for her. I was pleased to hear that she was starting her own strategic marketing service (and blog) for shelter cats, hoping to not only increase adoptions for hard to adopt cats, but teach others how to do so through marketing—Cat Hustler.

Julia had a very clear vision, and wanted something that was unique, eye-catching, and to the point. Not only would it need to meet traditional logo requirements, but since she is very into DIY and really creative, it would have to work on lots of different media. After we met to talk about the logo and her goals, I did some preliminary sketches.

DSC02522

After confirming that I was going down the right path, some preliminary logos were developed (a few below):

discarded-logo-options

Julia really loved the middle one, and we refined it a little further.

cathustler-logo-option6_P6

Julia didn’t need much in the way of branding guidance, but we decided on fonts (Overpass, with Gill Sans as a secondary) and a color palette.

cathustler-colorpalette

Client Testimonial

I’m really happy to report that the Cat Hustler loves it, and it has had great reception. Julia says, “It’s a perfect logo and people love it, but it’s also an exceptional specimen in the way of design. You knew it would be used beyond printed and digital applications, and made it work perfectly for a finicky DIY client.”

“I still can’t believe how easy Regina is to work with. She listened and advised with equal skill, cranked out mock-ups at record speed, humored the back-and- forth between details and minor edits like ear shape, and the timeline… just wow. Coming up with a clean, seal-style logo for cat stuff that hasn’t been done before is a challenge, and she knocked it out of the park.

Our two primary goals were met and exceeded. The first was to create something with such a clean, simple look that would 1) portray cat hustling as something that’s easy and 2) at least partially negate my large, unpolished presence when meeting people face to face. The second was to accommodate my DIY approach to everything. We didn’t know exactly how the logo would be used when designing it, but were sure that it would need to have lines and lettering thick enough to be cut with a Cricut and other untraditional (other than print & digital) applications. Thanks to the multiple files formats Regina provided, getting stamps made was easy. The design scales so well that a ¾” stamp was possible.

The second goal was a marketing objective; I wanted to make the branding inclusive rather than authorative. In other words, I want Cat Hustler to be a collaborative community, not a single person dictating best practices. Cat Hustler is a title one can give themselves, and that’s the make-or- break point in the branding. It’s what makes the logo desirable and why merch like t-shirts and decals will make effective tools for fundraising.”

It’s really nice to have a client that you can trust with taking your work and applying it properly.

logo-applications
Photos courtesy of Julia Grosz

It’s gone even further, and the logo can be found on a lot of places:

Photo courtesy of Julia Grosz
Photo courtesy of Julia Grosz
Photo courtesy of Julia Grosz
Photo courtesy of Julia Grosz
Photo courtesy of Julia Grosz
Photo courtesy of Julia Grosz
Photo courtesy of Julia Grosz
Photo courtesy of Julia Grosz
Photo courtesy of Julia Grosz
Photo courtesy of Julia Grosz
Photo courtesy of Julia Grosz
Photo courtesy of Julia Grosz
Photo by me
Photo by me

And that gorgeous gold foil black tote on the bottom? Julia very nicely made and gifted that to me! It’s so cool to see my work on so many different things, and with so many people!

Definitely check out Cat Hustler—also on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.

Categories

Follow Regina Ball Design on WordPress.com

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

See the latest on Instagram

Happy Holidays from these festive felines 😸🎄🎁 Card designed by me using Photoshop & #Figma ✨ Oh, hi there 👋🏻 Long time no see! ⁠ I'm finally getting around to reviewing one of my first projects at Huntress: undertaking redesigning our trial signup landing page and the whole user experience. ⁠ This is a bit overdue, but I had a pretty big creative accomplishment earlier this year: my art is now permanently tattooed on someone’s body 🔥 Long time no post but I finally got on a plane for the first time in two years and got to meet 2 of my Huntress Brand + Content teammates 💙 A slightly snarky little Valentine 💌 swipe for alternate color way ➡️ Popping in with some New Years cheer ✨ May this year suck a little less than the last two 🥂 This years’ holiday card! Sprung for the metallic foil and so glad I did ✨ Here for the pie. 🥧 And sweet potato casserole. And rolls. Hope everyone celebrating enjoys their turkey & carb coma 🖤
Copyright

All content © 2022 Regina Ball Design.

Blog at WordPress.com.
Back to top
  • Follow Following
    • Regina Ball Design
    • Join 31 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Regina Ball Design
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...