// OLD LOGOS
Looking at Old Logos for RMCS
As I’ve mentioned before, I used to own a service I’ve created for artists, in order to handle anything that has to do with promotion, social media handling and letting people work on what they want to work at, without distractions, dealing with algorithms and data, some of them might not fully understand.
I called it Raging Magpie Creative Studio. Here’s an analysis:
Raging: Being angry on the current state of social media and the way that artists are treated by companies like Meta. In general, anger always made me productive and the stress that was created was enough to get me in the zone.
Magpie: Magpies sing a lot throughout the day and create special bonds that can last for life with other magpies. Apart from these facts, they are also my favourite corvids. Since that’s the case, my goal was to create bonds with artists, help them through promotion on different scales (it was an affordable subscription service with three tiers) until they were happy with their income from their art.
Creative: Yup, the thing is that I still am an artist and was back then as well. So apart from curating to the advertising/promoting needs of the artists I came in contact with, I’d give feedback on what they were creating and I’d connect them out with people that would critique their work in way that would help the artists out. Every graphic, every logo, every poster or design or art in general related to RMCS was handmade by me.
Studio: In the end of the line, I was alone. Even if I wanted to create a team, I wasn’t having enough “customers” to help my business grow, so I wasn’t feeling very bonita to ask for help on a project without giving any compensation back. This is why it didn’t work: I was afraid to ask for help, and I didn’t have enough resources to hire someone.

Still, most of the activity was within the last 6 months of RMCS officially existing. I’ve learned a lot through the years I’ve been building it, and I worked on ways I could educate myself and other people better. I even tried to create an AI to help artists learn more about RMCS and help them out in the onboarding process.
Above the previous paragraph, you can see some of the logos I’ve created in the past, by turning the letters of the acronym “RMCS” into a magpie.
Below you will find some iterations of the acronym in different settings.
