Was the word “Club” an existing font, or done with some kind of freehand tool? I’m referring to the shakiness, which, if deliberate, could be a real pain to DO, if you know what I mean. It’s quite driven me up a wall when I do restorations to keep cleaning up that blasted “STRANGE TALES” logo, for example, better that thing were recreated ONCE on a computer and then copied endlessly, it’s got too many twists in it.
The neat thing about creating a standard logo, especially on a computer, is to be able to resize it and recolor it and RE-USE it endlessly, without having to do it over. I’m very big on logos, I realized back in art school in ’86 I had a real knack for it.
NICE.
Was the word “Club” an existing font, or done with some kind of freehand tool? I’m referring to the shakiness, which, if deliberate, could be a real pain to DO, if you know what I mean. It’s quite driven me up a wall when I do restorations to keep cleaning up that blasted “STRANGE TALES” logo, for example, better that thing were recreated ONCE on a computer and then copied endlessly, it’s got too many twists in it.
The neat thing about creating a standard logo, especially on a computer, is to be able to resize it and recolor it and RE-USE it endlessly, without having to do it over. I’m very big on logos, I realized back in art school in ’86 I had a real knack for it.
It was a font but I drew over it raggedly with the selection tool on a different layer.