#116 - Thank you fro your submission. it is a refreshing change from others that I have received. What (in your opinion) is the significance of the grid patter?. What if you tried to incorporate some reference to stone in some of the boxes? not necessarily an actual stone (although that might work) but a color or, better yet a texture that evoked stone. Keep the green squares though - I like those. Thanks, I look forward to some additional ideas. Dale
#143 I like where this is going. try bottom row - left to right - green brown w texture and brown with stone texture middle row left to right - white white green - top row left to right - blue green white - only put the texture with the brown - thanks
a bit confuse with your last feedback : like this? i'am a bit confuse with this, can you detail / correct if i'am wrong?
1. bottom row (left-right) = green - brown (w? with / without) 2. middle row (left-right)= white - white - green 3. top row (left - right) = blue - green - white every row has 3 coloum, the botton row green - brown -brown?
(only put texture (*stone texture) only brown?)
thanks, i'am now can working with you to update the design
input from my design perspective : i think 116 design are quite nice with concept (landscapes / pattern grid that represent some abstract shapes) without using some stone texture. maybe it can add some specific tagline, like *stone & garden landscapes* etc
I like where this is going. #144 Lets try this combo - take brown box on the left and make that a blue box (no texture) - move the pattern from the brown box on left to the brown box on right. try to stretch the objects (in the box) to fill a bit more of the box - the space between the objects represent mortar - you don't want huge mortar joints and little rocks - you want it the other way around. thanks Dale
newest update : take brown box on the left and make that a blue box (no texture) - move the pattern from the brown box on left to the brown box on right & stretch joint the object