







After a long waiting we found a name ... for now.
With our new logo, we have decided to stay with BH Creative Design.
BH Creative Design provides web and multimedia solutions for your business.
The sister promo to "Customer Profile" was this spot.









This job came to me during the process of building my portfolio website, so the both of them became a learning experience. The creativity of this site was motiviating, but also frustrating. In the end - I think it became a litle too flashy even for a musicians site.

The first live website I created was my portfolio website. While I created the logo bad in the design of the website, I created the website based of another site I saw which was simple.

One of the more casual, and possibly most offensive in presentation. Hobo Interactive was another daydream product that started with a small sick laugh and esculated to a fully offensive branding design.
I believe this was previous to later attempts at the full package, the letter head and business card. I may not remember this correctly, but I think it was inspired by a job rejection I got from a design company. It really deflated the blow a little when this design company, "Hill" and something or other sent me a branded envelop and letterhead to tell me I didn't match any openings at the time. In my small efforts and big mind, I was honored to be rejected so professionally. (Got that one ladies?). And so this collage was given life and existence.
Wow, why am I posting this one again. In color here. Before I had any conversations with others about design and logos, my creative little dreamer came up with this big no-no. Not really appealing anymore, the maiin font is probably a poor choice. And the icon or symbol come only in a Photoshop effect metal glaze.
So here's the downer of my designs. the one where you have to explain it to mom and whoever else looks at the fride. "No, see it? SEE IT? It's RIGHT there? It's the line between the 'b' and the ... nevermind ..." The design you have to explain. And no one wants and explanation. they want clarity in design. Most branding probably doesn't need a tag of explanation on it. But it got a little better. It was the base of an idea that may develop.
This, I think, is the first logo work I experimented with. I enjoyed it at the time, but this logo fails without the color - and I'm sure someone out there says it fails with the color too. Keep in mind, I said FIRST LOGO, so hold the arrogance for now.
NOTE: No individuals were paid for this logo in any way. It is strictly a gallery object measuring and observing technique, education and growth within this area of my career. Hell, I didn't even pay myself. I started too. I put a buck in the jar, but took it out the next day out of self-loathing for my current state of affairs at the time. Note, also, the desired web presence.
What's that there? Is that color? No grey-scale or black and white? BAD designer! BAD!
This one was perhaps the most researched and abstract logo design. Also while working at PAX as a master control operator (by now, you may see I did a lot of dreaming and doodling there - but I still did my job!) my co-worker began talking to me about this project. Her boyfriend at the time was in a ban and they needed a logo. After explaining to her a few times I was more of a web designer than a graphics designer (By this time my work experience score was logos: 2, websites:0) I finally accepted the challenge but promptly warned her I was not a logo designer. None the less, I did the research, played around in the sketch-pad and ended upp with this.
And this next part is not for the purpose of knocking them down any. They were two successful and talented individuals with more drive than I had at the time, but one thing was overlooked and that was the payment of the project. Although I initally offered this to them for free (mostly my insecurity told me my designs were amatuerish and not worth payment yet) they insisted on creating a payment. We discussed the options of royalty payments and of a straight forward buyout of ownership. Niether one was ever resolved or paid. In the end they chose this logo which was straight from the sketchpad to photoshop and was intended for developmental purposes. And low and behold, I saw later, one of my worst nightmares, the some non-vector based logo stretched out across a page or an area.
While I was working at PAX as a master control operator I'd do a lot of dreaming but didn't always have a lot of knowledge behind it. My first logo I ever created was for my website, bhcreative media&design. On occasional smoke breaks I'd chat with a guy named John that worked for a custom home company. Talking to him sometimes was exciting and educational. At other times it was discouraging. I was never going to be that focused, motivated and smart.
I think once you got somthing that looks good and clean in greyscal or blacck and white, I think, what you're supposed to do is apply color to it. My guess is that the first stage would have even been in less detail, more outlined. And here's the truth for me, why I am not a professional at this. I design in color. What pops to me is style and color. Below I threw in a few extras. he snazzy design and the applicable design. The applicable is th one where I look to see the multiplicity and duplication of this logo or identity. Hoes it work on business cards, on the web, on lettterhead? Packaging an idea and presenting it on different mediums is one of those aspects of design I enjoy.
I'm, for the most part, a brand name junkie. I see the recognizable identity marketed across different platforms and I get a creative juice that gets a taste of something good. If they marketed and packaged a product for me, I'd unfortunately, have less tendencies to do the right research on the full value or benefits of the product and get subjected to being a potential customer all to the thoughts of, "Ooh, that looks purty!"