Really like the round ones, this one is too black
like the shading. I like this one too, the fork works really well. Can u keep playing with designs. Contemporary spin. Cheers.
One designer said to me... and I agree so can you please work with this :)
"I would like to have the logo on chef jackets, branding iron, tissue paper, website, stationary, napkins, ties pretty much on everything!"
My comment is really some advice. For chef jackets or any kind of cloth or clothing, you need a logo that can be either screen printed or embroidered. This type of reproduction, and the creation of a branding iron, means that you need a logo that works in one color. That's actually the mark of a good logo -- if it can still communicate consistently in one color.
You also mentioned wanting something with a web 2.0 feel, but designers typically interpret that to mean using effects like gradients, light, shadow, and reflection -- all effects that look really great on a computer monitor, but that are impossible to reproduce with metal, screen printing, engraving, embroidery, etc.
For that reason, I'd like to recommend that we go for black and white only, as well as in color with all the effects added. Most companies will have different versions of a logo for different mediums. Take the NBC logo for example:
Black and white:
http://www.freelogovector.com/gallery/n/NBC%20logo.jpgColor:
http://wendellwallace.files.wordpress.com/2008/08/600px-nbc_logo_svg.png?w=468&h=452For television:
http://www.wkyc.com/weblog/directors_cut/uploaded_images/Nightly-Logo-780942.jpgCheers