The studio behind the brand.

The kind of work that takes time to get right — and looks like it.

What I believe about brand design.

I started Elkmade for businesses that know what they stand for, but haven’t found a way to show it yet. Most businesses get a logo and call it a brand. A logo is a shape. A brand is the reason someone chooses you over the next option. That gap is what I exist to close.

The work here starts with a conversation, not a proposal. I dig into your business — what you do, who you serve, what you believe — before a single mark is drawn. Design without that foundation isn’t brand design. It’s decoration.

Hudson Elkjer, founder of Elkmade

Founder

Hudson Elkjer

I’m Hudson Elkjer — the founder of Elkmade, based in Bryan–College Station, TX. I studied at Texas A&M, earning a B.S. in Business with a minor in Graphic Design. I’ve also spent years working as a head wrangler — it taught me more about patience and earning trust than most classrooms did, which, it turns out, is most of what brand work requires.

Every Elkmade project is handled from strategy through final delivery. No handoffs, no filters. The work is better for it, and so is the relationship.

Based in Bryan–College Station. Also working with clients in Austin, TX and Denver, CO.

The principles behind the work.

Clarity over cleverness.

A mark that needs to be explained is not a mark that is working. Good brand design communicates immediately and holds up over time.

One direction, fully developed.

Three half-baked options is not a service. One clear, considered direction — developed fully and refined together — is.

Built to last.

Trends date a brand faster than anything else. The goal is a system that looks right today and still looks right in ten years.

You work with the designer.

Not an account manager. Not a junior. Every decision, question, and revision goes directly to the person doing the design.

Want to work together?

Every project gets full attention from brief to delivery. If that’s the kind of work you’re after, tell me what you’re building.

Start a project