Meyers Construction Logo & Stationery Design

Auto-generated description: A logo for Meyers Construction is displayed against a background of steel beams.

Finally wrapped up Meyers Construction Logo and Stationery Design project. Couple of business card and stationery mock-ups to help David with the basics.

Really really happy with how this logo turned out; probably 20 pages of sketches in the end.

❤️ If anyone needs a new logo design, then please do get in contact.

👉 View my Logo Portfolio over at Smitho.graphics

Auto-generated description: A stack of business cards, labeled Meyers Construction with contact information for David Meyers, is surrounded by similar cards laid flat.

‘The Internet used to be Fun’ by Rachel J. Kwon

“The Internet Used to be Fun” has a good selection of posts, from a wide variety of bloggers, who talk about how the web, and the internet, has changed with respects to personal blogging, general web interactions etc, over the years:

Rachel:

I’ve been meaning to write some kind of Important Thinkpiece™ on the glory days of the early internet, but every time I sit down to do it, I find another, better piece that someone else has already written.

So for now, here’s a collection of articles that to some degree answer the question “Why have a personal website?” with “Because it’s fun, and the internet used to be fun.” — Updated, 27 May 2024

⇲ Source: projects.kwon.nyc/internet-…

Lots of references to the Indieweb, Cosyweb and how there’s been a shift back to personal blogging and trying to reengage the more personal, easy going and exciting formats of years gone by.

I’m an OG blogger, cutting my teeth with: dial-up modem, ICQ, web chatrooms and just finding the vastness and randomness of the internet just absolutely mind blowing, and super exciting.

Then I started blogging on Typepad, before moving to Wordpress for my Logo Design Portfolio and Blog, which itself has been around for well over a decade.

Amazingly my Typepad blog is still online; I mostly used it as an online journal about my early challenges with mental health, but it’s a real throwback to when you actually engaged with so many people via the comments, blogrolls etc.

I do miss those years, and now actively shifting from the big closed walls of certain ‘social’ platforms, to the more cosy environment of the Smallweb/Indieweb etc.

Hence in part signing up with micro.blog, and more engaged with the smaller social networks.

Starting to find my passion for blogging all over again.