Hello
I wondered if anyone would care to pass any comments on these two endeavours? One of them will form the basis of the 'banner' on a (demo) Chinese restaurant Web page - with many thanks to ibclare for providing the basis of the idea of the panda/logo.
These are my first attempts, and it doesn't matter if you rip them apart: colour scheme; type-size; panda size and placement; background colour and texture, etc.
I intend to place two small colour images, one of a Chinese chef in the kitchen, and another of a dish of chop-suey or something colourful, in the middle (to the right of the bear).
My own concern is that the panda looks a little imprisoned by the Chinese and English texts - not sure if anyone agrees?. On the other hand, I need to keep the two texts together - one is a translation of the other. Another preoccupation is what Web page background colour would go with that shade of green - as I indicate, it doesn't need to be green.
I am open to all ideas and criticism!
Many thanks.
I wondered if anyone would care to pass any comments on these two endeavours? One of them will form the basis of the 'banner' on a (demo) Chinese restaurant Web page - with many thanks to ibclare for providing the basis of the idea of the panda/logo.
These are my first attempts, and it doesn't matter if you rip them apart: colour scheme; type-size; panda size and placement; background colour and texture, etc.
I intend to place two small colour images, one of a Chinese chef in the kitchen, and another of a dish of chop-suey or something colourful, in the middle (to the right of the bear).
My own concern is that the panda looks a little imprisoned by the Chinese and English texts - not sure if anyone agrees?. On the other hand, I need to keep the two texts together - one is a translation of the other. Another preoccupation is what Web page background colour would go with that shade of green - as I indicate, it doesn't need to be green.
I am open to all ideas and criticism!
Many thanks.
















