Non-profit logo design for an educational startup helping middle and high school students learn to express themselves through writing.

Non-profit logo design for an educational startup helping middle and high school students learn to express themselves through writing.
Worksight created the visual identity and site design for this New York City-based law firm. Tendy Law provides a sophisticated, boutique outside general counsel practice advising midsized corporations, not-for-profits, and financial institutions regarding all corporate matters. See the site design here.
Graphically translating a drawing (for an app icon promoting a STEMI catheterization aid) to line-based vector art begins with a reductionist lens on your eye. The outlines, gone. The inconsistencies in line weight, gone. the gradation, gone. What we’re after is power by the simplest means.
Thank you Dave Hopkins for the pleasant design interview (lucky 13)!
itunes:
https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/the-quickie-interviews-for-graphic-designers/id1463743075
Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/show/6cX7gO7xbN2x2UKkZtVBQd?si=bRaCyjCTQt2szdswKXP_bA
Worksight designed the logo, brochure, and website for a new Harlem-based health center. Check the site out at lotushealthcenter.org
Pratt Institute interviewed Professor Scott Santoro who shared his thoughts on the 2018 PyeongChang Olympics emblem and other exceptional examples from the past.
Logo design by Worksight for the Polyglot Press, a publisher of multi-language books and the republisher of out-of-print classics. The word “polyglot” in fact means: having the text translated into several languages: polyglot and bilingual technical dictionaries. The parrot is used not only because of the letter P but also to symbolize the power of words and the speaking of truths.