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Gail6891361

: What size canvas should logos be designed on? When designing a logo is there a minimum size canvas that should be used to keep quality when it is enlarged or when reduced? Obviously the dimensions

@Gail6891361

Posted in: #Logo

When designing a logo is there a minimum size canvas that should be used to keep quality when it is enlarged or when reduced?

Obviously the dimensions of a canvas depend on the shape of the logo, but is there a sugested size?

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@Holmes874

Its always recommended to create logo in vector program but You should definitely have a larger canvas size Like 90% the size of your screen WHEN 100% ZOOM NO MATTER which application you are using. OF COURSE you can increase the size of logo if you are using vector program like ILLUSTRATOR But when when you start designing logo, you work most of the time in shaping the object like adjusting anchor points, lines or Curves and in that process you also use your arrow keys to move the anchor points up and down So if you use a very small or very large canvas size then you will face some problem in adjusting those Anchor points of logo.

So I STRONGLY recommend you to use the canvas size of your logo according to your working screen(but keep it at-least 512px in width or height)

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@Angie364

You should definitely use vector graphics for logos, not just because they scale to whatever size you want but also because you can change them later. Your customer might want it in a different colourscheme or in B&W or whatever and you can't efficiently do this unless you use vector graphics. While others recommend Illustrator or Corel Draw, I think Inkscape is far better and it's free: inkscape.org/

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@Gail6891361

As others have mentioned logos should always be designed in vector format for scale-ability, embroidery, screens... you never know what the client will do with it latter. But I always use a standard letter size canvas horizontal to display the logo or variants for the customer. I find it a good size when they call and want a pdf sent over. It fits on the screen well and if they print it out they usually have letter size sheets in the printer so it's just easier on them. Customers are not as computer friendly as you may think sometimes so giving them something they don't have to think about make things go smoother. All preference though.

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@Sims5801359

While you should be creating vector artwork which is scalable to any dimensions, it makes sense to create the logo in the order of a few inches/cm across.

This is just so that when you initially import it at 100% scale into a empty box on a page layout at 100% scale, it's not so big that you only see the white space from the logo's upper-left corner. You'll generally need to scale it up or down, or just auto-scale to fit the box, but this just avoids a potential second or two of confusion.

Variant logos are sometimes created for extra large or extra small applications, but this is fairly rare.

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@Fox8063795

Typically a logo is designed in a vector program such as Illustrator, so it can be scaled to meet the various needs required by the customer. For instance, a logo will typically end up on:


Business cards
Letterhead / envelopes
T-shirts
Web headers / web pages


Since you're theoretically going to be designing in a format that can be scaled without loss (vector) the size you work with should be something you're comfortable with (remember if you put too much detail into your logo it's going to be lost when it's scaled down to fit on a business card).

If vector won't work for you (e.g., don't own Illustrator / don't want to learn another program / strictly prohibited by your religion) you should try and figure out where the logo is going to be used. If it's only going to be on a web site I'd try and figure out the largest iteration of the logo and work at that size. If it's going to be printed you should figure out where it's going to be printed (business card, t-shirt, mint tin, sticker, etc.) and again work at the largest physical size (i.e., x inches by y inches) at a minimum of 300 ppi.

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