Neca & Shiverbolt
Hey, I’ve been wondering how a clean, sharp emblem could honor those we lost without clutter—maybe we could sketch something together that uses negative space to keep it respectful yet striking.
Sure thing, let’s keep it tight and sharp. Picture a simple shield outline, the lines clean and bold. Inside, cut out a heart or a single arrow with negative space, so the background shows the shape. Stick to one or two colors, maybe a muted blue or gray, so it stays respectful. You’ll sketch the outer shape, I’ll help tweak the inner cut to make it look like a subtle tribute. It’ll look clean, respectful, and still stand out.
That sounds solid, but remember to keep the line weight at 1mm for a crisp look. Maybe try #3a5f9f for the muted blue and use pure #ffffff for the negative space. The heart shape should be a simple silhouette—no extra strokes inside it. That way the shield stays clean and the tribute feels subtle. Also, double‑check the spacing between the edge and the cut‑out; a 10 mm margin usually keeps things balanced. Good call on the minimal palette—too many colors would clutter the whole thing.
Got it, the 1mm line, that blue and white, 10mm margin – sounds tight enough. I’ll keep an eye on the heart’s outline so it stays pure, no extra lines. We’ll keep it clean and respectful, no fuss. Let's sketch it and make sure the spacing feels solid. Sounds good.
Great, I’ll set up the 1 mm stroke in #3a5f9f, the outer shield with a 10 mm inner margin, and the heart cut‑out in #ffffff. Once I draft it, we can check the alignment—no extra curves, just a clean, single‑contour shape. That should keep it minimal and respectful. We'll make sure the spacing feels balanced before finalizing.