I need a logo for company Botanic Artsy, it basically sell plants. I need suggestion for fonts, color schemes and logo. I'm really confused.
>>459087Do you want to make the logo yourself? Do you want a really good logo or just anything that works? If you want a decent one, there's not enough information to give you good suggestions, also people on here usually will only help you if you show your own sketches or concepts. There's different ways to go about it, but if you just pick random fonts, colors and what the company do, there's a high chance are you'll end up with something cheap-looking and generic, and you're not going to be able to justify the design decisions you took. Instead the best way to design a logo is something like this: Research what you can about of the company especially the origins and the core essence, as well as what the intentions or objectives for the logo, come up with descriptive words and ideas that line up with what you want the logo to communicate or convey, then sketch them on paper or a tablet and make iterations, refine and vectorize the best ones, explore different fonts and type arrangements you can use https://fontic.xyz/, test the designs on black and white, upside-down, on negative and different sizes, print and mockups, you can add color at any step but is better to create a distinctive silhouette for the logo first and add color at the end, for color palettes suggestions you can use https://khroma.co/, also try to justify each design decisions based on the research you did.
>>459087"it basically sell plants" does not say anything. Is it online or you do have a store? You want to be modern, or appeal to a older audience? Expensive or cheap? How much is the median sell? Etc.Also, talk about the bussiness and show what logos you do like. Also, why you chose "Botanic artsy" as a name can help to figure an appropriate logo.
>>459087The one question people often refuse to address in this situation is "why do you NEED a logo?"They just assume they do, for the most nebulous reasons like "because everybody else has one" or " because it will help my business/ product/service make money"...but these are usually just assumptions and even where people come up with valid reasons they often prioritize them (and a logo) in ways that aren't very realistic.Of course many designers are happy to play along with the basic premise because it's how they make money, and when all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail.You need to really nail down what "needs" you think the ideal logo will fulfill and *precisely* how it will do that. Then look objectively at alternatives that can accomplish the same *well defined* goals (not just "basically sell plants"), and honestly assess which option/path is superior, and why.If you do this you will have a far better idea of what kind if visual business identity to pursue, or if it's even that important.More importantly, if you can't approach this process of proving your basic premise with the same tenacity you would a potential customer who *makes* you do the same work to sell them something they ostensibly "need", then you are in for a really rough time in any business endeavor and will just be hoping for things to magically work out in your favor.
>>459087Think about what this logo is for.One easy way to increase your visual uniqueness is to add in some related imagery. Think about what botanic arty does and how you can incorporate symbols into your image. Perhaps vines could climb up some of your letters and bloom into a single flower? The goas is to have fun. Be sure the BA can work on it's own as a symbol without color as printers will often need a 1 color version of your logo.
>>459087maybe make the Otanic rtsy bigger?so it overlaps a bit with the A