>>13024083Seems gay as fuck. Whoever uses the word theatre is a faggot. Cafe is also really fucking gay. Comedy is questionable, but less gay than the other two words. The color scheme is good.
The sideways "cafe" part is aggressively homosexual and "quirky" in the way the gets your face beaten in as a stranger pulls down your pants, lubes up your asshole, and begins to assfuck you in order to mock and humiliate you, despite the fact that you love every minute of it.
Is this a real place? If so, it's 100% gay as fuck because it's illegal to be cool. If you just do logos and graphic designs, that's pretty good. I don't know shit about art, clearly, because I'm not a faggot and I was born and raised balls deep in endless pussy.
Disregard anything that might inform you that I am a homosexual or was somehow not balls deep in pussy.
Back to the sign. The word "theatre" makes it incredibly fucking gay, especially spelled in the gay british way. If you're trying to attract "hip young spineless metrosexual men to politically correct or aggressively liberal 'comedy' shows" , then you're on the money.
You're not going to get as many heterosexual or normal people with that sign because you spelled theatre in the gay British way. If you spelled it in the American way, people would presume it was a movie theater.
I don't know exactly what more to say about the logo. Clearly whoever made it has considerably greater skills in digital image production than myself. I am a writer, and much less so somebody who knows how to use computers. If you used something less gay and cliche than "theatre" , such as "Comedy Spot", that would be more remarkable and memorale.
You didn't produce a name for the establishment, you just used 3 vague words that describe the place. It's like naming your restaurant "Restaurant". If you want to be notable, rather than average, you would need a more unique name. Even the word Comedy is too vague and blase. You would need something aggressive.