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Turn Passion Into Progress

Articles and tools for creative-seekers, business builders, and the artistic-minded by Hart House Creative®.

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New authentic artist stories, and resources you'll want to get your mitts on. ​Gain access to actionable tools, and boost motivation by squeezing an extra dose of creativity in your day with us.

Brand Identity

Updated: Sep 15, 2025



Tis the season. Grab your perfect gift for the someone in your life from one of these local lovelies.


Soaphaus Artisan Cold Processed Soaps

All-natural & Palm Oil Free

Natural soaps are made with melted oils and butters. They're full of vitamins, nutrients, and antioxidants. They will moisturize and nourish your skin with natural ingredients. If you haven't used them yet, I encourage you to try these vegan and handmade soaps.



Foci Design

Specializes in handmade products. Inspirational possibilities are endless, and Foci believes they should always be explored. Party Favors. Cutting boards, earrings, coasters, and ornaments Oh My!








Pancho's Bags

Pancho "the dog" is the boss of my friend's front yard. He is so cool that he became the director of these sewing projects. All the items are handmade with LOVE!









Rockin' Bettie

Vintage Vegas is back in a significant way. Whether you live the rockabilly life or just flirt with pinup fashion and accessories, the styles here balance old-school style with a modern edge. Owner Amy Ortiz hand-picks every item in their limited stock, emphasizing quality and individuality. Be sure to check out their new in-house collection of dresses, Boulevard Nights.



Local Oasis

Local artist Abbie Renzema runs an adorable shop in the Arts District featuring gifts and clothing. They have a great selection of stylish Vegas- and desert-themed tees, greeting cards, and souvenirs.








Paige & Rye

Equal parts clothing shop, home decor and event space, Paige & Rye is the kind of boutique you want to move into. Featuring curated collections of hats, throws, candles, and accessories sourced from local makers and designers.





Amethyst Colony

Woman-owned and operated, Amethyst Colony's trendy and affordable dresses and tops are curve-friendly and made to inspire confidence.










The Good Wolf Lifestyle Co.

One of those rare shops that stocks about an equal amount of stylish clothing for both women and men with a variety of unique goods and accessories. @thegoodwolflv Shop Now







The Writers Block

The Writer's Block is a bookseller, educator, literary treasury, and artificial bird sanctuary.












Punkrockandpaintbrushes

A collective group of artists who share love for art and music.












Mike’s Recovery

The greatest soaks, soaps, and wellness products utilizing unique blends of essential oils at higher concentrations than you've ever experienced.









Hey Maker

Artist-owned gallery and retail space

Helping artists develop their businesses













Tofu Tees

Using business as a platform 2 bring attention 2 social issues.










Everything we share here is meant to be helpful and inspiring. We’re speaking from experience. Please consult a qualified professional to help make decisions. You are responsible for how you choose to use this information, and we are not liable for any loss, damages, or issues that may arise. We can’t be responsible for how things play out, but we’re always rooting for your success!


Credits

Author and Editor: Jenn Hart (More About Me)



Popular Related Articles



Subscribe to The Squeeze on our little piece of the internet to get design promotions, resources, stories about other creatives, and inspiration for your eyeballs and brainstorms.





Keep creating Hartists! Follow @harthousecreative on Instagram and Linkedin.


 

Updated: Sep 15, 2025




A brand strategy is essential no matter the size of your business. Discover tips on building your strategy even if you are starting with a small budget.


Whether your company is big or small, a brand communicates an organization's purpose, values, and personality. Along with the visual marks (your logo, symbols, color palette, etc.), a brand strategy comprises the complete identity, creating a perception in the minds of its employees, investors, and, ultimately, its consumers.

So why is it critical to ensure a brand strategy is in place? Because customers don’t buy products or services – they buy brand stories. How does the product or service make a customer feel? Think about how you feel when you put on that fresh new pair of Nikes. Or when you head to your favorite restaurant – you’re not just purchasing the meal on your plate. You’re purchasing the overall vibe, the service, the ambiance, or rather the experience in totality. A clear brand strategy will allow a company to set the foundation for who they are and the experience they want to serve up to customers. A good brand strategy is a roadmap that can act as a lens through which you view your company. This view gives your customers consistency which builds trust with them.

Branding and Marketing

You may say, "I already have a solid marketing approach," so why is branding critical? We meet with clients who say they have a website, social channels, paid advertising, and an email database, yet no real brand strategy. However, when asked what their unifying approach is, they say it’s a struggle, and they feel as if they’re constantly guessing – trying to throw things at the wall to see what sticks. Let’s fix that!


  1. The brand is strategy. It is the foundation that supports all marketing and sales tactics.

  2. Marketing consists of all the promotional activities to sell products or services, putting the products/services in front of the target audience defined by the brand.


Brand and marketing go hand in hand, but you can think of brand strategy as your foundation – it’s larger than your marketing efforts and provides coherence. Brand remains in your customer’s mind after the marketing tactic has been delivered–no disrespect to marketing. Marketing efforts should also be strategic and integrated to deliver the right message to your intended audience to encourage purchase.

Define the market opportunity. When you started your business, you likely went through the process of identifying the “white space” in the market, or the gap in the market that allows your product or service to satisfy unmet consumer needs. When we think about the market opportunity, we need to consider three main areas to identify the competitive advantage that will set us up for long-term success:



When we look through each of these perspectives, we can see new opportunities and gaps and better understand the whole gamete of options our customer has available to them, which leads us to consider how our products and services can be perceived. Or rather, why should customers choose us among the available options?

Building a customer-centric approach

Today modern brands design for relationships, not just transactions. Often, a company will think about the products or services they’re selling from their point of view. But we really need to think about it from the point of view of the target customer. What you’re selling needs to make a connection with the target audience it was designed for. Creating an audience-first environment provides insights that inform the experience and cultivate the relationship between the brand and the customer. When we listen to what the customer needs and wants, we can better position our offerings to meet those needs and set ourselves apart. A great brand example of a customer-first approach? Southwest Airlines. Southwest has set itself apart in the airline industry by prioritizing customer satisfaction, which informs its operation. This type of prioritization of customer service results in customer loyalty and retention.


Brand Touches All Aspects of Your Business

Branding is vital to all areas of your business. It informs operations, marketing, and even helps define your employee culture. It provides coherence and a lens through which to view business decisions. This, in turn, translates into financial efficiencies as well when your company sits on a unified market approach. You generate less waste through marketing and are better able to target and have a defined space in the market that you have carved out and consistently own.

Whether your company is large or small, a solid brand strategy will positively impact all around. Even with a small budget, you can do a lot to start your brand strategy.



And don't forget. We’re here to help along the way!



About the Author: Lauren Gouvea, CEO of Versa Brand Studios Lauren is lifestyle driven and seeks to find the spark that ignites human connection – the one that will cut through the clutter and create a meaningful relationship with the customer. Her passion and experience inform all her work. With 17 years of results-driven brand, advertising, and integrated marketing experience, she is adept at applying marketing strategies across complex organizations. Honed through managing brand marketing teams for some of the premier resorts on the Las Vegas Strip, she is improvement-minded. She thrives when cultivating creativity, inspiring innovation, and building integrity to create positive change for her clients. With that approach, she and her collaborators produce solutions that grow brands, drive demand, and make positive consumer perceptions for national and global premium clientele across lifestyle, hospitality, travel & tourism, retail, restaurant, and nightlife industries.



Everything we share here is meant to be helpful and inspiring. We’re speaking from experience. Please consult a qualified professional to help make decisions. You are responsible for how you choose to use this information, and we are not liable for any loss, damages, or issues that may arise. We can’t be responsible for how things play out, but we’re always rooting for your success!


Credits

Author: Lauren Gouvea

Editor: Jenn Hart (More About Me)



Popular Related Articles



Subscribe to The Squeeze on our little piece of the internet to get design promotions, resources, stories about other creatives, and inspiration for your eyeballs and brainstorms.





Keep creating Hartists! Follow @harthousecreative on Instagram and Linkedin.

 
Graphic in different color combos with a hat, sunglasses and text that says brand hacks

Updated: December 19, 2025


If all went accordingly all the time, everyone would follow the steps for building a brand, and perfection would ensue–but life doesn’t proceed in a straight line. So neither does building your business’s brand. This is especially true for artists. We are all familiar with the starving artist trope. When starting your craft, building enough revenue to invest in marketing takes time. But the key is not to take shortcuts. Instead, maneuver your artist business through the style essentials and plan to phase out the process so you can stay on top of the curve instead of letting the curves roll over you and drown your brand in a sea of sameness.


Here are a few hacks we love for artist brands that can save time and scratch for your initial rollout.


To be clear, these tricks do not and should not replace a complete brand strategy and guide with a logo and identity package designed just for your brand. They will help you get off the starting line but to win the race set a goal date in mind to address your branding with a professional so you can scale. But when budget and time don’t allow for those crucial brand pieces to be fully realized before your launch or a big break in your artist career, what can you do?


The answer.


Choose a few key style essentials to be the base of your initial identity package. Make sure they feel genuine to you, your values, and goals, and then be consistent with them until you are ready to hire a designer to build your strategy, guide, and logo. Let's go through the style decisions you will want to make.


Brand Identity


COLOR

Choose two to three colors and pull the hex values so you can ensure the exact color you choose is used every time you build a marketing asset. You can find these in Word if you don’t have photoshop. Watch the video below for the step-by-step process.



Use these colors consistently on your website and other marketing materials. Later, a designer can convert these colors to PMS colors for you and potentially expand your palette to help tell the whole story of your brand using color theory.


FONTS

Choose commercial fonts that are easily accessible to you. They must be commercial. Anything that says free for personal use only will require payment to have a commercial license. If you love the font and want to purchase it, great! If free is your goal, then make sure it’s a free commercial font. Start with sites like dafont.com or fontsquirell.com.

  • Don’t neglect your computer’s operating system. Sometimes, a winner is in there.

  • Choose a headline font and a body font.

  • Make sure the body font has a bold and italic version.

  • Test them out to make sure they are readable before committing.

  • Do they look good together?

LOGO

There is no substitution for a qualified designer to create your logo. Fast and cheap is exactly that–fast and cheap (AI isn't always the answer). This is one of the most visible pieces of your identity package. It appears on everything, and a designer will know how to translate your vision into a meaningful mark. But wait, you still have no budget?


Ok, breathe.


As a temporary solution, choose a different font from the body and headline font you picked above. Type your business name or personal name in Word in a few different sizes. Then, take a screenshot of the type-only marks and use them in all your marketing. This will not provide you with all of the different formats that you will undoubtedly need at some point for merch and other marketing materials with specific formatting requirements. It should not be your long-term solution. However, nothing screams homemade as much as a logo typed in the same font as the rest of your website. Avoid this and take the time to make these type-only marks for yourself. A few overused fonts to steer clear of:

· Papyrus

· Comic Sans

· Helvetica


Here’s a quick step-by-step to create the type-only mark described above.


PHOTOS

Luckily as an artist, you will have some original content. But there are instances where you’ll need a photo or texture to fill in a marketing piece. Check out stock sites if photoshoots are not in the budget. Friendly advice on photos: try to avoid cheesy office photos. Your brand deserves better. Seek out a handful of background textures and lifestyle photos that feel good to you and are relevant to what you do or sell. Example: An author who writes non-fiction about plant life could find close-up textures of leaves.

HEADSHOT

Invest in one well-lit personal photo of yourself for your website and press kit. If you don’t have one, have a friend take one in an outdoor space with minimal background noise. An artist is part of their brand. Present professionally.

VOICE

It takes a well-organized dive into the target audience to build a true voice profile for your brand, but to get started, choose a few words that feel genuine to your artist’s statement. These words will become a checklist to compare against when writing social copy, website copy, or any customer-facing copy. For more tips on the tone of voice, check out our article here, written by marketing expert and award-winning copywriter Eileen Lemish.


Image of brand style sheet with  the brands chosen fonts and colors

If you follow the steps above, you will have the beginnings of your style guide. The style rules for your brand.


Now, the most challenging part – enforcing them.


Diligence is a must to reap the benefits of repetition, which helps people remember a brand. You will be tempted to step outside the rules, but if you do, you will lose any equity you have built in your artist's brand. Be patient to preserve your point of view and accept a little imperfection in the short term to achieve consistency and excellence in the long term.



Why this works for artist brands

This strategy typically works for artists because, since you are an individual-led brand, people expect you to evolve, which is perfect for this strategy! So, when you upgrade to a fully fleshed-out brand strategy and all the trimmings, it will feel like the next chapter of your artist evolution and will hopefully create opportunities for new audiences and old ones to reconnect. But, it only works if you are consistent with the temporary set of style rules.



Everything we share here is meant to be helpful and inspiring. We’re speaking from experience. Please consult a qualified professional to help make decisions. You are responsible for how you choose to use this information, and we are not liable for any loss, damages, or issues that may arise. We can’t be responsible for how things play out, but we’re always rooting for your success!


Credits

Author and Editor: Jenn Hart (More About Me)



Popular Related Articles


Subscribe to The Squeeze on our little piece of the internet to get design promotions, resources, stories about other creatives, and inspiration for your eyeballs and brainstorms.





Keep creating Hartists! Follow @harthousecreative on Instagram and Linkedin.

 
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Hart House Creative, its employees, partners, The Squeeze, and guest writers make no guarantees for results. Methods and marketing suggestions are based on prior knowledge and intended to inspire business owners and other creatives. Every person has different goals. None will be held liable for any negative results achieved from implementing suggestions from our website.

 

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