Strategies For Letter-Based Logo Design
Strategies For Letter-Based Logo Design
Strategies For Letter-Based Logo Design
Companies of every kind sign their names with linked letters called ligatures. Ligature
means to tie. Ligatures make excellent business signatures. They’re handsome, simple and
compact. And they’re fun, too—we all have initials! Some letters link in one typeface but not
another. Others link in lowercase but not in upper. What follows are a variety of ways to get
your letter pairs beautifully together. The logo typefaces and colors are listed at the end of the
article.
Almost-identical Strokes
Pairs like UR share not-quite identical strokes, yet often flow naturally together. To link
1 of 10 2/25/2008 5:56 AM
neatly, you must usually sacrifice some parts; here, the R gave up a foot, the U a serif.
Angled to Vertical
Angled strokes often link well to vertical strokes. The easiest technique is simply to cut the
angled letter in half.
Curved to Vertical
The more decorative the typeface, the more easily dissimilar strokes can be linked. Even a
curving stroke can replace a vertical. You need gentle curves, though, circles won’t do (far
right).
2 of 10 2/25/2008 5:56 AM
Uppercase-lowercase
Uppercase letters can often link to lowercase with excellent results. An uppercase I, though,
won’t link to anything—its body just disappears! But a lowercase i has the advantage of its
distinctive dot and can link with many letters.
Horizontal Crossbars
A few letter pairs share top crossbars, which are easy to link. Similarly, some typefaces have
exaggerated serifs that can be linked.
Mid-letter Crossbars
Many letters, such as ABEFHPR, have mid-letter crossbars that can be connected with a little
help—just cut the letter apart and s-t-r-e-t-c-h the bar!
3 of 10 2/25/2008 5:56 AM
Remove a Stroke
Here, a phantom stroke hints at what’s not there! This is particularly effective with Modern
typestyles such as Bodoni and Didi that have extremely thin strokes.
4 of 10 2/25/2008 5:56 AM
Crop!
Your intrigued reader will linger for valuable moments on this design! Crop away the
bottoms of your letters, and the viewer’s eye must complete the image. Add a company name
or other horizontal graphic to span the gap (far right).
5 of 10 2/25/2008 5:56 AM
How to Design a Logo of Letters
Interlock
Circular letters flow most naturally into other circular letters. Interlocked here like wedding
bands or Olympic rings, two complete letters function as one.
Overlay
A simple alternative to interlocking is to lay one letter atop the other, then “link” with a
common fill or stroke. Here, a colorful gradient turns two letters into one object.
Build Bridges
This technique works when nothing else will! Abut your letters, then conceal the junction
with a decorative graphic, line or a series of lines and shapes. Easy, fun and always engaging.
6 of 10 2/25/2008 5:56 AM
Use Transparency
Transparency softens. Create a gossamer effect on even the boldest ligature by lowering the
opacity of one or more characters. Here, all three letters are set at 50%.
7 of 10 2/25/2008 5:56 AM
Article Resources
8 of 10 2/25/2008 5:56 AM
9 of 10 2/25/2008 5:56 AM
Subscribe to Before & After
Did you enjoy this article? Subscribe, and become a more capable, confident
designer for pennies per article. To learn more, go to the Before & After site.
Before & After has been sharing its practical approach to graphic design since 1990.
Because our modern world has made designers of us all (ready or not), Before & After is
dedicated to making graphic design understandable, useful and even fun for everyone.
Copyright ©2005 Before & After magazine, ISSN 1049-0035. All rights reserved.
10 of 10 2/25/2008 5:56 AM