Remembering The 5 Smartest, Wittiest and Coolest Football Club Logos

This world is hard to please. It demands everything out of the ordinary, something more rational, influencing and focused. Logo Designing is one of the many crucial decisions taken to leverage the reputation. But, what wracks the brain the most is creating a logo for a sports team, especially when it is a Football club.

Revealing the most exotic Football Club logo designs

A team is made out of the sacrifices and hard work of many. It has its own set of principles and values which a badge must reflect it. Therefore, no football team gives up the hunt till it finds a smart, innovative and inspiring logo.

Custom Logo Design is an uphill task. The logo designers are seen deliberating over a plethora of logo designs to create something unique that simultaneously throws light on the team’s ideology.

Here we have mentioned some of the most legendary Football club logos that will make you glued to the computer screens. If you are a football enthusiast, there is nothing better than this.

  • Football Club: Arsenalfoot

Arsenal is the ‘gunners’ and its first logo surfaced in the year 1949 showcasing three grand cannons and a motto describing its origins – the Borough of Woolwich. It underwent its first major revamp in 1949 where the Latin motto – ‘Victoria Concordia Crescit’ – was featured. It means ‘victory grows out of harmony’. In 2002, the logo was remade when the club migrated to Emirates Stadium. This was the third and last modification till date. Carrying the red backdrop and featuring a much advanced cannon, the logo says just ‘Arsenal’.

  • Football Club: Chelseafoot1

Chelsea’s first logo was interesting with a Chelsea Pensioner and a bunch of medals and the team was fondly referred as ‘the pensioners’. In 1952, The manager of the team Ted Drake became an agent of change, dropping the ‘pensioners’ and adopting the ‘lion’ for the mighty team, which said ‘Chelsea Football Club’. This logo was used for 33 years when a transformation was again sought. This time the logo was much simpler – A lion and the team’s initials against the royal blue background. The shape was circular. The latest Chelsea logo is a star attraction, introduced in 2005 bearing great similarities from Ted Drake’s lion. The ‘Chelsea’ is mentioned on the crest, saying much about the grandeur of the team.

  • Football Club: Liverpoolfoot3

Liverpool has always been on the sky and the logo beautifully depicts it. The first-ever logo was sketched in the 1980’s featuring the Liver bird on the crest, which has become a quintessential mark of the club. It consisted of just the initials. In the sixties, the logo was revived. The new piece was simple, sober and spectacular in all terms. The Liver Bird was there with the full name of the club carved in white on red. What Liverpool exhibits today is a clear reference to the Hillsborough eternal flame, the Shankly Gates and the anthem You’ll Never Walk Alone.

  • Football Club: Manchester Cityfootball4

The Manchester City has witnessed a series of logo modifications since its inception. The most famous being the circular crest with a vivid mention of the club’s name ‘Manchester City’, surrounding a central shield with a ship inside. For those who aren’t aware, it typified the Manchester Ship Canal and the road to Lancashire. The erstwhile badges include an eagle, an old heraldic symbol and the three rivers – the Irwell, the Irk and the Medlock. Today’s version features a Latin motto ‘Superbia in Proelio’, which says ‘Pride in Battle’. The golden, fearsome Eagle occupies the crest and the three stars on the top add to its splendor.

  • Football Club: Manchester Unitedfoot5

Manchester City and Manchester United shared the same badge of the city’s coat of arms. In the 1960s, what was made carried the same ship and the same three rivers as that of Manchester City with white roses – the color of Yorkshire. Soon, an individual creation was sought and a phenomenally striking badge was created where roses were replaced with footballs and a red devil was placed in the center. The name of the club was prominently written in yellow – Manchester United Football Club. In 1998, the words ‘Football Club’ were ditched, featuring those little cute footballs with ‘Manchester United’emboldened in yellow color against a red backdrop.

The Last words

An insight into the past betokens an exciting future for Football Club logos. Seeing these excellently constituted logos, it is certain that designing is more of self-reflection than the art.

1 Comment

  • Copa America Logo – The Journey from Argentina 2011 to Chile 2015 - / June 17, 2015 at 9:45 am

    […] Some disconnection can be found between the hard angles of the logo and a little-bit overly scripted typography. However, in application, it is apparent that there is a maximalist way that prop up the combo of […]

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