The design service Kimp offers graphic and video design monthly packages, which allows businesses to get a dedicated design team for a fraction of the cost of working with freelancers and design agencies.
Kimp is for startups, SMEs, marketers, creative agencies, freelancers, entrepreneurs – just about anyone who needs cost-effective, high quality graphic design services, on an ongoing basis.
We take our time so a two month project we’ll drag out for 6 months so we can continue billing you. For a monthly flat rate of $499 the clients are offered unlimited number of designs and revisions. The designs include logos, blog images, packaging and labels, flyers and brochures, posters, social media images, business cards, infographics, trade show banners, and more.
Video package is $599/mo. The combined package that includes both graphics and video designs, is $895/mo, which saves over 20% discount on a continuous basis.
Other than the first-class designs and fast turnaround time that often does not exceed a business day, Kimp comes with no contracts, no hourly billing or any other additional fee.
Kimp makes the design process simple. Clients can place their requests online and the designated designers will start working on them. Kimp has talented designer teams that operate in six different time zones. Kimp designers can usually provide 2-3 designs per business day for their clients.
With Kimp, you’ll feel like you have an in-house designer – without the hefty price tag.
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Kimp is great. Their entire process is very organized. Really love the experience from on-boarding to handling the tasks. Quality designs, fast turnaround. Highly recommended!
I really wish that I knew about this kind of service long ago. I was referred to Kimp by a friend so decided to give them a try. I have blown away by how much I was able to get done and free up my time. Great designs from the getgo. My project manager is very responsive and friendly to work with. Overall, I really enjoy working with the Kimp team and I can see this being a very long working relationship.
Based on our record, Input seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 5 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
I tried out Monaspace but felt that the fonts were a bit thin for my QHD monitor I use as my primary display. Perhaps it's something you get used to after some time using it, but I ended up switching back to my favorite font, Input Mono (which, as a coding font, isn't actually monospace, so it brings a bunch of cool features and doesn't need to do texture healing). https://input.djr.com/info/. - Source: Hacker News / 6 months ago
> In virtually every other form of typography, the responsibility of alignment is given to the typesetting application, not the font. If source code editors can highlight syntax, they could also interpret tabs and syntax to create true, adjustable columns of text. https://input.djr.com/info/. - Source: Hacker News / over 1 year ago
> And they're absolutely right. But it begs the first-principals question-- why code using a monospace font? Today, every major editor that isn't terminal-based supports proportional width fonts beautifully. There was a whole "coding font" family designed around the idea that we should be using proportional fonts for this, and it makes a great case... https://input.djr.com/info/ ...except that just about every... - Source: Hacker News / about 2 years ago
Also you can think out of the box and realize that you may not need a monospaced font for development, but a font that has the advantages of monospaced font. I've been using Input Sans for years now. See at: https://input.djr.com/info/. - Source: Hacker News / over 2 years ago
Input Sans is a great proportional coding font, but it isn't quite my favorite. That would be Trebuchet++, my personal font that started as Trebuchet MS with a bunch of customizations to my taste. (I wish I could distribute it; now I will have to find a way to do that.) But the Input Manifesto (that's what I'll call it) has a wonderful explanation of how proportional fonts are beneficial for code:... - Source: Hacker News / almost 3 years ago
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