Project Overview
We're looking for a volunteer graphic designer to create two attractive icons/logos, one for our brand-new program and one for our legacy program. The images should be able to be used in either black and white or color by people who are not necessarily tech-savvy. The engagement should last one to two weeks. In our first meeting, we will discuss our goals and initial ideas. In subsequent sessions (or over email), you will present images and receive feedback.
Our ideal volunteer has experience designing logos or similar images and will be prepared to show us a few design examples.
We are so excited to be launching a major new program that will triple the size of our organization! We will be serving hundreds of immigrant children over the course of the next three years or so, helping them obtain visas, safety, and security. Now that we need to differentiate between two programs, our name and organizational logo are not sufficient for us to describe our work. In addition to the two names that we have come up with for our two programs, we are excited to depict them visually through icons/logos for each one. Please help us make our vision a reality!
We have come up with names for the two programs and initial ideas for the imagery. We will provide our logo, colors, and information about the programs. Once complete, the images will be used in written and digital marketing materials when discussing our programs and possibly on physical items such as swag.
Nonprofit Overview
New England Justice for Our Neighbors welcomes immigrants by providing free, expert legal services to low-income immigrants, refugees, and asylum seekers. In 2022, we touched the lives of 274 clients, providing invaluable legal advice and representation. Living without legal status means lower income, a lack of healthcare and other public benefits, susceptibility to unscrupulous employers, and a life of fear. For our low- and no-income clients, free legal aid and representation is a true lifeline, the difference between fear and tranquility, between safety and deportation, between remaining with family members and being forced to separate from them, often even between life and death.