shibligd : Overall you have the right idea, though its spelled wearhouse no warehouse. I like the idea of the baby face but that one didnt come out quite right. The graphic might look better on the left. Xpressesions: I like it a lot, but not feeling the pink. Can you try to incorporate some other colors. Maybe use leaves around the baby face.
vector just means a shape thats editable so photoshop can do the same thing but if you have to have it in illustrator because thats the software you have, is not a big problem its just easier for me in photoshop this is photoshop
Logo Proposition for ORGANIC BABY WEARHOUSE .................................................................
Okay well right now my favorites are Xpressions, Ariestotels, and coolwanz Coolwanz: I like the font and the way its layed out. But not feeling the baby graphic. Can you try something else with that? Also the color could use a little tweaking to be more inline with the site.
That's actually not what 'vector' means. A vector graphic is resolution independent, meaning it can be scaled to any size without losing quality. Photoshop is a raster-based app, it's resolution-dependent... An 3" x 5" @ 300 dpi .psd image will lose quality when enlarged to, say, 9"x15". Enlarging the image 300% would effectively reduce the dpi by 300%. Fine for web, doesn't work for printing. A vector image enlarged 300% (or 3000%) would not lose any quality whatsoever. Just a tip.
Good read and link also shows an image with both, raster/bitmap and vector/geometric sample: (Edited link: thank you MAC!) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vector_graphics Client's run into trouble because they don't know about this until it's time to go to "press".
Yeah, I've seen that happen many times, xpressions... your link doesn't show what you intended it to, though... it just links to my reply... ?
good to know! I dont do a lot for print. in photoshop you can draw a shape with the shape tool or pen tool and then you can rasterize it, so what is it if you dont rasterize it?