Could I see this logo with the COPPESS letters approximately the same height as the middle corn plant. Also, make the FAMILY FARMS text a lighter green. Thanks!
This is great interpretation of the design direction I gave - great job! A couple tweaks on the corn plants, from a farmers perspective, the first small plant on the left should not have and tassels at the top and should only have about 3-4 leaves at that stage. The second plant also should not have tassels at the top and the ear of corn on the right side of the stalk should move down - just above the bottom two leaves you have drawn. The third plant is correct with the tassels, but a corn plant, believe it or not, only has 1-2 ears of corn per stalk so you can remove two of the existing ears and spread the other two out. Thanks!!!
I like the logo, however, client is thinking in a different direction. Could you see what you can do with this idea: the word COPPESS in all caps, san-serif, to the right of the 'S' in COPPESS are 3-4 corn plants in various stages of maturity/growth (2/3 leaf plant to a mature plant w/tassel). Add a brown underline beneath the COPPESS type and the corn plant graphics to represent the soil/earth the corn plants are growing in, then the words FAMILY FARMS beneath the brown line in all caps.
This one is great! Could you bring the letters c,o,e,s,s down slightly so their midline is centered with the two 'P'. Then reduce the height of the FAMILY FARMS text and space those letters out.
I also like the 'P' treatment in this logo and that the corn kernels extend down into the 'leaves' - nice job! Could we see this with a serif font for the other letters in COPPESS
I really like the treatment of the two 'P' letters in this one - great job! Could I see the other letters in the word COPPESS in a serif font that more closely ties into the style of the two 'P' letters.
I really like your corn graphic! wondering if the corn graphic could become incorporated into the COPPESS type? Maybe the two 'P' letters could form the leaves or be incorporated into the leaves of the corn plant?
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