The Basics of Sign Design
Learn about the five sign categories and the different conditions and restrictions that affect sign design
First, define the purpose of the sign. It has a job to do. To better understand how signs differ from one type to another, you need to first categorize the sign into one of five types:
- Identification (business name, building, area, section, unit, module, etc.)
- Informational (rules, regulations, contact, times, length, duration, special details, etc.)
- Directional (go left, right, up, down, move over, merge, form one line, two miles ahead, etc.)
- Safety (warning, danger, stay-out, no running, low clearance, slippery, windy, wet, etc.)
- Regulatory (any sign that states a law, ordinance, regulation, or directives for which a penalty can be charged or a ticket issued to those who violate them)
Yes, I realize there is a large amount of crossover with sign types. Sometimes, an identification sign also contains some directional or regulatory information for the viewer, or a directional sign may also have some identification details. The point is to identify and assign the type of job the sign will perform — and design it accordingly.
Second, overcome the obstacles. Good sign design requires an understanding of how the sign’s job is affected by a variety of obstacles, restrictions, setbacks, and design conditions:
- The location of the sign – (up high, down low, behind a tree, side of a wall, across the street)
- The face size allowed – (too small for all the copy or too large for such a short message)
- The viewing distance – (the average distance the sign will first be seen by the viewer)
- The viewing conditions – (behind a fence, always foggy, trees, people, a lot of bus traffic, etc.)
- The colors allowed – (many HOAs or historic districts put restrictions on colors used)
- The shape and design – (some cities control design and styling to fit a specific look or feel)
- The budget – (every obstacle usually means more cost to work around the problem)
- Function – (the sign may need to have changeable panels or tenant names)
- What’s under the ground – (large signs require large footers)
- Wind load and engineering – many signs require engineering so that they don’t crumble