600 17th Street, Suite 2800 South
Denver, Colorado 80202
Phone: (303) 226-5865

Logo, Print and Identity Design

Denver Logo Design Services, Stationery, Letterhead, Brochure Design

Your corporate identity, including your logo, tag line and printed materials, tells clients and prospects about your company at a glance. Blue Ray Media will work within your budget to create visually exciting work that captures your clients' imagination and encourages them to do business with you. Contact us to learn more about what we can provide.

Services include:

Logo design

Tag line development

Business card design and printing

Stationery design and printing - including letterhead and envelopes

Brochure design and printing services

Newsletter design and printing

E-newsletter design and data management

Calendars, posters, stickers, vinyl banners, event tickets, CD and DVD sleeves, promo cards, flyers and more!

A few of the logo designs created for clients:

  • Logo Design Denver

    Aten & Associates is an management company that was looking for a contemporary logo.

  • Denver, Colorado Logo Design Company

    East West International Consulting works in global trade and needed a logo to appeal to a global audience.

  • Professional Logo Design Services

    The Right Warranty provides extended vehicle warranties that help ease customers' minds.


Tell us your goals
. We'll help you achieve them.

Contact us to get started creating a new website.

We're happy to talk to you about your needs and goals. Fill out our online form and tell us what you want the web to do for your business, nonprofit organization or other group. We'll work together to plan how to create a new website that works for you and your customers.

Helpful Web Tips & News about Our Company

How do you know when it's time to redesign your website? Read: Eight Ways to Know it's Time to Redesign Your Website

You've been asked write a Request for Proposal, or “RFP”, and send it to qualified website development companies. Where do you start? Read: How to Create a Request for Proposal (RFP) for Web Site Development Services

We know you're curious. Is it website or Web site?

The New York Times is still using Web site, but we've (somewhat reluctantly) decided to move from spelling it "Web site" to "website". We're now using "email" and have given up on "e-mail", too. (The AP just switched from e-mail to email. Other terms, like e-commerce, will keep their hyphens. The AP moved to "website" last year - read about it here.)