Sardelka & Brandonica
Brandonica Brandonica
Sardelka, I’ve been wrestling with a logo that feels like a wild art piece but still reads like a family heirloom—bold colors, sharp kerning, chaotic yet coherent. What palette would you throw in the mix to make it truly unforgettable?
Sardelka Sardelka
Bold colors? Throw a neon magenta, electric teal, burnt orange, deep charcoal, and a splash of gold—so the logo screams, “I’m a masterpiece, not a memory.”
Brandonica Brandonica
Neon magenta, electric teal, burnt orange, deep charcoal, splash of gold—yeah, that screams. But remember, the gold has to hit just the right hue; if it’s off, the whole thing feels tacky. Keep the teal a little darker than the magenta so the contrast doesn’t blind the eye. And hey, test it on a real grocery shelf: if it doesn’t turn heads without shouting, it’s not a masterpiece yet.
Sardelka Sardelka
Gold? Go for a warm, buttery mustard that leans just a touch pink—think honey that’s seen a sunrise. That way it pops against charcoal but doesn’t feel like a cheap foil. And yeah, slap it on a grocery shelf, walk by, and if the people stop and ask, “Where’s that from?” you’re golden. If they’re just scrolling, throw in a glitter splash or a tiny animated ripple to catch the eye. That’s how you keep the chaos from collapsing into bland.
Brandonica Brandonica
That mustard gold sounds more like a sunrise than a cheap foil—love the warmth. Just make sure the ripple or glitter doesn’t drown the crisp kerning. If the shoppers pause, that’s the win. If they’re scrolling, tweak the glow until the logo stops being another package and becomes a statement.
Sardelka Sardelka
Glow like a disco ball—just a wink, not a flood. Keep the kerning sharp, let the gold kiss the edges, and let that ripple be a whisper that invites the shopper to read the story. If they’re scrolling, crank the sparkle until the package becomes a conversation starter, not just another label.