Could you try #64 with the original font from #50 for Le Caveau and fine wines. Additionally, could the flourishes on either side of fine wines be simplified on #64? Could the arcs showing depth of the wine cave be lightened and perhaps some detail be added to the image on #64 as well and perhaps lighten the color a little towards deep red?
Also, #59 is much better with the simplified coloring...but I like brown and dark red instead of dark red and gray...perhaps try this coloring with the layout mentioned in the comment below.
We love the barrel aspect of #49 but are trying to make the logo less difficult to turn into signage and other promotional items. Please try using the barrel on the left side, but remove the banner and put Le Caveau on one line and fine wines on the second line but smaller font to the right of the barrel in a general horozontal rectangle format. Also, try to keep with a solid color lettering...maybe "Le Caveau fine wines" in dark red or a similar color of the banner...grapes could be that same color. I like the brown wood grain look to the barrel like it is.
I Like #49,50 but I talked to a branding expert and these were some of his comments:
-if you want to make a shirt, or letterhead a 2 color logo is very powerful (
keeping your type from always being inset is very flexible as well
-you also want to think about signage, and a horizontal layout for product labels, letterhead, etc
-since you're going to have a retail location you need to quickly convey to drivers that you are a fine wine shop
- #50 is probably the cleanest traditional 'logo' for multipurpose
,not too thrilled with font, however I like the fact it has alternating letter heights
which gives a visual pattern vs. actual text
-Re: #49 all the designs could be taken down to a more simplistic form
all of it, the grapes are gradient, and the text is gradient
you have to blend colors to get that effect
you can always simplify a more complex logo if you like the overall feel
so if you like #49, you can identify the elements you like and think about how they can be used by themselves, or as two colors
#34 is almost perfect. I think the LE are a bit bigger than CAVEAU...if we can size them down a tiny bit the words will flow in nicely across the banner.
in #17 & #8 I am wondering if it would be possible to lighten up the barrel a bit and put in some barrel lines. Also leave #17 & 8 in place to compare.
By the way the reward for this project is supposed to be $400. My wife had some problems upgrading the award last night and is working with the support team to get it fixed. We are sorry, but it ran the upgrade twice for some reason.
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-if you want to make a shirt, or letterhead a 2 color logo is very powerful (
keeping your type from always being inset is very flexible as well
-you also want to think about signage, and a horizontal layout for product labels, letterhead, etc
-since you're going to have a retail location you need to quickly convey to drivers that you are a fine wine shop
- #50 is probably the cleanest traditional 'logo' for multipurpose
,not too thrilled with font, however I like the fact it has alternating letter heights
which gives a visual pattern vs. actual text
-Re: #49 all the designs could be taken down to a more simplistic form
all of it, the grapes are gradient, and the text is gradient
you have to blend colors to get that effect
you can always simplify a more complex logo if you like the overall feel
so if you like #49, you can identify the elements you like and think about how they can be used by themselves, or as two colors
Porteur du Projet
Porteur du Projet
Porteur du Projet
Porteur du Projet
Porteur du Projet
Porteur du Projet
#3 would be better if Caveau was bigger than Le or at leaqst the same size.
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Porteur du Projet