That's a clean, elegant result - and I agree with your read. "Rustic Cotswolds" points somewhere specific: less formal heraldry (banners, ribbons, EST. crests), more natural, understated, countryside-refined. Think botanical line art, hand-drawn feel, laurels/wheat/sprigs, generous space, thin elegant type. Warm and organic rather than corporate-formal. This current one is close but the ribbon banner still reads a bit "heraldic emblem." To push it toward rustic Cotswolds, I'd drop the banner and lean into the botanical framing. Here's a prompt tuned for that direction: Modern rustic logo for a boutique Cotswolds recruitment company "Key Resourcing". Understated countryside elegance: the words "KEY RESOURCING" in a refined thin serif or elegant sans font, framed by delicate hand-drawn botanical line art - laurel sprigs, wheat, or olive branches - arching above and below. No ribbon, no banner, no crown. Small "EST. 2012" beneath. Fine antique-gold line work on a deep forest green background (#183728). Airy, minimal, organic, lots of negative space. Flat vector, symmetrical, centered.
On a white background, Create a series of ornamental tags inspired by vintage jewelry designs. Incorporate rich textures like silk and lace in deep jewel tones, primarily green and red. Add embellishments such as intricate gold filigree, pearls, and colorful gemstones. Aim for a luxurious and eclectic aesthetic, blending elements of nature and art nouveau with an antique flair. Keeping tags straight and evenly spaced
On a white background, Create a series of ornamental tags inspired by vintage jewelry designs. Incorporate rich textures like silk and lace in deep jewel tones, primarily green and red. Add embellishments such as intricate gold filigree, pearls, and colorful gemstones. Aim for a luxurious and eclectic aesthetic, blending elements of nature and art nouveau with an antique flair. Keeping tags straight and evenly spaced
That's a clean, elegant result - and I agree with your read. "Rustic Cotswolds" points somewhere specific: less formal heraldry (banners, ribbons, EST. crests), more natural, understated, countryside-refined. Think botanical line art, hand-drawn feel, laurels/wheat/sprigs, generous space, thin elegant type. Warm and organic rather than corporate-formal. This current one is close but the ribbon banner still reads a bit "heraldic emblem." To push it toward rustic Cotswolds, I'd drop the banner and lean into the botanical framing. Here's a prompt tuned for that direction: Modern rustic logo for a boutique Cotswolds recruitment company "Key Resourcing". Understated countryside elegance: the words "KEY RESOURCING" in a refined thin serif or elegant sans font, framed by delicate hand-drawn botanical line art - laurel sprigs, wheat, or olive branches - arching above and below. No ribbon, no banner, no crown. Small "EST. 2012" beneath. Fine antique-gold line work on a deep forest green background (#183728). Airy, minimal, organic, lots of negative space. Flat vector, symmetrical, centered.
On a white background, Create a series of ornamental tags inspired by vintage jewelry designs. Incorporate rich textures like silk and lace in deep jewel tones, primarily green and red. Add embellishments such as intricate gold filigree, pearls, and colorful gemstones. Aim for a luxurious and eclectic aesthetic, blending elements of nature and art nouveau with an antique flair. Keeping tags straight and evenly spaced
That's a clean, elegant result - and I agree with your read. "Rustic Cotswolds" points somewhere specific: less formal heraldry (banners, ribbons, EST. crests), more natural, understated, countryside-refined. Think botanical line art, hand-drawn feel, laurels/wheat/sprigs, generous space, thin elegant type. Warm and organic rather than corporate-formal. This current one is close but the ribbon banner still reads a bit "heraldic emblem." To push it toward rustic Cotswolds, I'd drop the banner and lean into the botanical framing. Here's a prompt tuned for that direction: Modern rustic logo for a boutique Cotswolds recruitment company "Key Resourcing". Understated countryside elegance: the words "KEY RESOURCING" in a refined thin serif or elegant sans font, framed by delicate hand-drawn botanical line art - laurel sprigs, wheat, or olive branches - arching above and below. No ribbon, no banner, no crown. Small "EST. 2012" beneath. Fine antique-gold line work on a deep forest green background (#183728). Airy, minimal, organic, lots of negative space. Flat vector, symmetrical, centered.
On a white background, Create a series of ornamental tags inspired by vintage jewelry designs. Incorporate rich textures like silk and lace in deep jewel tones, primarily green and red. Add embellishments such as intricate gold filigree, pearls, and colorful gemstones. Aim for a luxurious and eclectic aesthetic, blending elements of nature and art nouveau with an antique flair. Keeping tags straight and evenly spaced
That's a clean, elegant result - and I agree with your read. "Rustic Cotswolds" points somewhere specific: less formal heraldry (banners, ribbons, EST. crests), more natural, understated, countryside-refined. Think botanical line art, hand-drawn feel, laurels/wheat/sprigs, generous space, thin elegant type. Warm and organic rather than corporate-formal. This current one is close but the ribbon banner still reads a bit "heraldic emblem." To push it toward rustic Cotswolds, I'd drop the banner and lean into the botanical framing. Here's a prompt tuned for that direction: Modern rustic logo for a boutique Cotswolds recruitment company "Key Resourcing". Understated countryside elegance: the words "KEY RESOURCING" in a refined thin serif or elegant sans font, framed by delicate hand-drawn botanical line art - laurel sprigs, wheat, or olive branches - arching above and below. No ribbon, no banner, no crown. Small "EST. 2012" beneath. Fine antique-gold line work on a deep forest green background (#183728). Airy, minimal, organic, lots of negative space. Flat vector, symmetrical, centered.
That's a clean, elegant result - and I agree with your read. "Rustic Cotswolds" points somewhere specific: less formal heraldry (banners, ribbons, EST. crests), more natural, understated, countryside-refined. Think botanical line art, hand-drawn feel, laurels/wheat/sprigs, generous space, thin elegant type. Warm and organic rather than corporate-formal. This current one is close but the ribbon banner still reads a bit "heraldic emblem." To push it toward rustic Cotswolds, I'd drop the banner and lean into the botanical framing. Here's a prompt tuned for that direction: Modern rustic logo for a boutique Cotswolds recruitment company "Key Resourcing". Understated countryside elegance: the words "KEY RESOURCING" in a refined thin serif or elegant sans font, framed by delicate hand-drawn botanical line art - laurel sprigs, wheat, or olive branches - arching above and below. No ribbon, no banner, no crown. Small "EST. 2012" beneath. Fine antique-gold line work on a deep forest green background (#183728). Airy, minimal, organic, lots of negative space. Flat vector, symmetrical, centered.
On a white background, Create a series of ornamental tags inspired by vintage jewelry designs. Incorporate rich textures like silk and lace in deep jewel tones, primarily green and red. Add embellishments such as intricate gold filigree, pearls, and colorful gemstones. Aim for a luxurious and eclectic aesthetic, blending elements of nature and art nouveau with an antique flair. Keeping tags straight and evenly spaced
On a white background, Create a series of ornamental tags inspired by vintage jewelry designs. Incorporate rich textures like silk and lace in deep jewel tones, primarily green and red. Add embellishments such as intricate gold filigree, pearls, and colorful gemstones. Aim for a luxurious and eclectic aesthetic, blending elements of nature and art nouveau with an antique flair. Keeping tags straight and evenly spaced
That's a clean, elegant result - and I agree with your read. "Rustic Cotswolds" points somewhere specific: less formal heraldry (banners, ribbons, EST. crests), more natural, understated, countryside-refined. Think botanical line art, hand-drawn feel, laurels/wheat/sprigs, generous space, thin elegant type. Warm and organic rather than corporate-formal. This current one is close but the ribbon banner still reads a bit "heraldic emblem." To push it toward rustic Cotswolds, I'd drop the banner and lean into the botanical framing. Here's a prompt tuned for that direction: Modern rustic logo for a boutique Cotswolds recruitment company "Key Resourcing". Understated countryside elegance: the words "KEY RESOURCING" in a refined thin serif or elegant sans font, framed by delicate hand-drawn botanical line art - laurel sprigs, wheat, or olive branches - arching above and below. No ribbon, no banner, no crown. Small "EST. 2012" beneath. Fine antique-gold line work on a deep forest green background (#183728). Airy, minimal, organic, lots of negative space. Flat vector, symmetrical, centered.