Based on the user's input [Brand Name / Project Name], [Type / Industry], [Brand Positioning], [Core Keywords], [Emotional Tone], [Layout Direction], [Main Color], [Secondary Color], and [Aspect Ratio], design a high-quality "Japanese Brush Shop Wordmark." Note: The goal is a truly commercial shop logo, not ordinary typography, a poster title, or pure calligraphy artwork. Center the design around a brush-written feel, ensuring the main text features obvious variation in stroke thickness, pressure and lift, slight flying-white (dry brush) effects, and natural brush movement, while maintaining clear readability and strong recognizability. [Main Text Requirements] 1. Use the brand name as the core subject, rendered with a handwritten brush style. 2. Strokes should show clear variation in thickness, rhythmic pressure changes, slight dry-brush texture, ink richness, and a sense of breathing. 3. Certain key strokes may be moderately exaggerated to create a memorable focal point. 4. The font style does not need to be rigid or standard; it may include natural deformation and shop-specific personality. 5. The emphasis is on a "commercial shop wordmark," not a traditional calligraphy exhibition piece. The overall feel should strongly evoke a Japanese storefront, signboard, or noren curtain. You may discreetly add elements such as small red seals, small vertical explanatory text, limited Kana/Pinyin/English, or red blocks with white text as accents, but keep them restrained. Keep the background clean so the main logo stands out clearly. The final result should look like a highly recognizable wordmark ready to be used directly by a real Japanese restaurant, izakaya, tea house, cafeteria, or Japanese lifestyle brand.

A cinematic rendering of [subject] walking through a rain-soaked street at night, illuminated by moody neon lights, reflections dancing on wet pavement, and a hazy urban skyline in the background. The subject feels alive, caught between sol

Ultra-realistic creative advertising scene showing a giant smartphone displaying a McDonald’s food-ordering app interface inside a modern restaurant kitchen. The phone screen features neatly arranged food compartments like a vending machine