Robbins & Armstrong, LLP
Style Directions · Stage 5 · Eagle, Idaho · 14 July 2026

Pick one before anything gets built

Three directions, one firm.

Same colors, same fonts across all three, locked and checked already. What changes is how the front page is built: what you see first, how much room it has, and the one small motion that becomes the firm's signature. Pick the one that looks like the firm Leigh runs.

Two honest notes on the photos. There are no photographs of the three CPAs or the Eagle office anywhere yet, so every face below is a stand-in monogram, and the State Street picture in direction three is a placeholder tone, not a real photo. A real shoot of Leigh, Hazen, and Brittany plus the 450 E State St office is bundled into the sale, and it is the single biggest upgrade this site can get. No star rating or review count appears in any direction, on purpose: the firm's Google rating works against it, so every direction builds trust with twenty years, real faces, and a real address instead.
D1 The Nameplate Anchor · their brand, dressed up classic
Robbins & Armstrong, LLP
Eagle, Idaho · Est. 2005

Certified Public Accountants

Eagle, Idaho CPAs

Individual and business taxes, kept under one roof, by the same three CPAs year after year.

Since 2005Twenty years in Eagle
Three CPAsLicensed in Idaho
State StDowntown office
LR
Leigh RobbinsCPA
HA
Hazen ArmstrongCPA
BK
Brittany KeplerCPA

Monogram stand-ins. Real headshots come from the bundled shoot.

Hero sketch

Palette

#F7F3EB sandstone paper (dominant)
#171310 warm near-black (type + rules)
#7B2D26 oxblood (accent)
#EFE8DC alt band
Paper dominant, ink type. Oxblood on the one action and the rule only, under 7 percent of the page.

Type

Twenty years on State Street.

We have been working with this CPA firm for many years and they are wonderful. Any time I have a question or need help they are responsive and come to my aid. I highly recommend them.

Kim Vasquez · real Google review

Signature moment
The balance rule. A heavy line and a hairline settle into place under the name, like a total ruled off in a ledger. Once, on load.
The one risk
A paper nameplate can read expected. Held in check by the slab serif no other local firm uses, and by leading with real faces, which none of them do.
Their fingerprint
The name on the door since 2005, refined. The warm thread from their old wordmark, matured into oxblood.
Leigh says yes because that is the firm he runs. Twenty years, his name on the door, finally built like it is worth what he charges instead of the template every tax shop shares.
D2 The Ledger Recommended · middle of the window
Robbins & Armstrong, LLP · Eagle, Idaho · Est. 2005
01

Certified Public Accountants

Eagle, Idaho CPAs

One firm for your personal and business taxes. You will work with the same CPA every year, and you will hear back from a person, not a voicemail tree.

Serving Eagle since2005
Licensed CPAs on staffLeigh, Hazen, Brittany
Downtown office450 E State St
LR
Leigh RobbinsCPA
HA
Hazen ArmstrongCPA
BK
Brittany KeplerCPA

Monogram stand-ins. Real headshots come from the bundled shoot.

Hero sketch

Palette

#171310 warm near-black (hero band)
#F7F3EB sandstone paper (reading)
#7B2D26 oxblood (emphasis band)
#A64B3F clay (action + accents on dark)
Warm-dark hero, sandstone reading below, one oxblood band for the closing action. Accent under 7 percent.

Type

Twenty years on State Street.

We have been working with this CPA firm for many years and they are wonderful. Any time I have a question or need help they are responsive and come to my aid.

Any time I have a question or need help, they are responsive and come to my aid.

Kim Vasquez · real Google review · italic pull quote

Signature moment
The balance rule, on a dark field. The two lines settle under the name like a total ruled off, then the ledger line below reads as a balanced entry.
The one risk
A dark hero can read cold. Held in check by a warm near-black instead of a cold slate, real faces, and sandstone paper on every section below.
Their fingerprint
The balanced statement and the ruled ledger. The proof strip is a booked entry of presence, not a badge row, and never a rating.
Leigh says yes because it reads established and evidence first. Presence laid out like a balanced ledger, which is how a CPA thinks, and no other firm's site could wear it.
D3 The State Street Record Bold edge · editorial, documentary
Robbins & Armstrong, LLP
Eagle, Idaho · Est. 2005
Placeholder tone · real State Street photo in the build

Downtown Eagle, since 2005

The CPAs on State Street.

A twenty-year firm you can walk into. Individual taxes, business books, payroll, estates, and the IRS letters most shops send away.

450 E State St, Suite 140 · Eagle, Idaho Est. 2005 · No. 8999
Since 2005Twenty years in Eagle
Three CPAsLeigh, Hazen, Brittany
One roofTaxes, books, estates, IRS
The people you'll actually work with
LRHABK

Hero sketch

Palette

#171310 ink scrim over the photo
#F7F3EB sandstone type + body
#A64B3F clay accent + action
The photograph carries the page. Color barely appears. A real State Street image replaces the placeholder tone.

Type

Twenty years on State Street.

We have been working with this CPA firm for many years and they are wonderful. Any time I have a question or need help they are responsive and come to my aid. I highly recommend them.

Kim Vasquez · real Google review

Signature moment
The balance rule at editorial scale. A hairline settles under the section line, the record ruled and dated.
The one risk
Editorial can tip toward creative agency, which is Leigh's hard no, and the hero photo is not his yet. Held at the window's edge by the sober serif, the credentials up front, and zero trendy type.
Their fingerprint
The State Street address as a dateline, the firm registered as No. 8999, and downtown Eagle as the setting. A record of a real place.
Leigh says yes because it looks like a premium magazine feature about his firm and his town. It is the biggest stretch from what he has now, and the best warm layer to graft onto The Ledger.

What I would pick

  1. D2, The LedgerMost clearly theirs, and the hardest to copy. Presence laid out like a balanced ledger is exactly how an accountant reads a page, and it never needs a rating to do it. The editorial system also scales cleanly across all 30 pages, so the deep pages stay handsome without extra design time.
  2. D1, The NameplateThe safe one. It reads like a dignified twenty-year firm's letterhead, so it is the lowest risk of a no. Pick this if D2's dark hero feels like too much for a CPA.
  3. D3, The State Street RecordThe strongest magazine-grade hook, and the biggest stretch from what they have today. Its best use is probably as a warm photo layer on top of D2, once the real State Street and office photos exist.
Reply with one of: D1, D2, or D3. A mix is fine too, for example "D2 with D3's photo hero". Nothing else gets built until you pick.