What Makes a Logo Work: Design Principles Most Developers Ignore
I've shipped side projects with logos I made in five minutes -- a colored circle with a letter in it, or worse, just the project name in a nice font. They were technically logos. They also looked l...

Source: DEV Community
I've shipped side projects with logos I made in five minutes -- a colored circle with a letter in it, or worse, just the project name in a nice font. They were technically logos. They also looked like they were made in five minutes. When I started studying what makes professional logos actually work, I realized the gap wasn't artistic talent. It was knowledge of a few core principles that designers learn early and developers usually never encounter. The five properties of effective logos Paul Rand, who designed the IBM, UPS, and ABC logos, argued that a good logo must be: distinctive, visible, adaptable, memorable, and universal. Let me break down what each means practically. Distinctive means it doesn't look like everything else. This is the hardest property to achieve because the most obvious visual metaphors for any industry have already been used thousands of times. A lightbulb for ideas, a gear for engineering, a shopping cart for e-commerce. Using these cliches doesn't make your