What we offer

Services

Oz Designs provides practical design support for small websites and public-facing email continuity. The work is intentionally straightforward: clear visuals, cleaner page presentation, and contact details that stay usable when your backend mailbox changes.

Prepared logo concept sheets, laptop, and color notes laid out for a design submission review.

Logo and identity cleanup

Wordmarks, small brand marks, header graphics, and supporting assets that need to look clean on real screens, not just in a design file.

Website visuals and layout support

Buttons, hero artwork, page sections, and content presentation choices that make a site easier to scan and easier to trust.

Email continuity setup

A practical forwarding-based email option for people who want one public address while keeping flexibility around the destination inbox.

Design work that supports the whole contact path

Small business websites usually need more than one isolated deliverable. A logo affects the header, the button style affects calls to action, and the published email address affects what customers remember when they need help later.

That is why the service mix here stays connected. We look at how the design assets, enquiry points, and email details work together so your site feels consistent from the first page view to the first reply.

If you need a lightweight first step, you can start with the Email Application Form. If you already know the wider brief, the contact page is the better route.

Creative workspace prepared for design planning and website production.
Modern web design workspace with a large screen and studio lighting.

What to expect from each service area

Service area Typical outcome Best fit
Logos and small brand assets Cleaner marks, refined headers, and assets that hold up at web sizes. Businesses updating an older site or launching a simpler web presence.
Page visuals and interface support Sections, buttons, and graphics that make the page flow easier to follow. Sites that need better clarity before adding more features.
Stable public email setup A public-facing address that can keep pointing to a new destination inbox later. People who want continuity on business cards, websites, and contact pages.
Typing at a desk with a notebook open beside a keyboard.

When the project is small, simple beats clever

Many sites do not need a sprawling feature list. They need a homepage that makes sense, a contact route that stays accurate, and visual choices that look deliberate instead of improvised.

For broader product or internal-tool planning beyond a standard business site, it can help to compare custom web development services or review AI consulting services before committing to a larger build path.

How projects usually move forward

1. Define the public-facing goal

We start with what visitors need to understand quickly: the offer, the contact point, and the visual tone.

2. Build the practical pieces

That may include logo refinement, layout support, button graphics, or the email-forwarding setup that protects address continuity.

3. Keep the next step clear

Every page should make it obvious how to enquire, what details to gather, and where support questions should go.

Choose the right starting point

If the main issue is a stable public email address, begin with the application form. If the site visuals or service presentation also need work, send a broader enquiry so the scope can be reviewed together.