Logo Styles
Style is the visual language of a logo. Each style has its own conventions for color, type, composition, and the kinds of brands it suits. Pick a style below to get AI-tuned prompts, palettes, and example outputs.
Why split by style? Because the prompt that produces a great minimalist logo will produce a poor vintage one. LogoQuill auto-picks the AI model best suited for each style and gives you per-style prompt patterns, color tips, and typography guidance.
Minimalist
uses 1–2 colors, generous whitespace, and simplified geometry to deliver a single clear visual ideaVintage & Retro
uses badge or ribbon framing, distressed textures, serif or hand-lettered type, and muted earth tonesHand-Drawn
uses sketch-like strokes, irregular linework, and visible imperfections to feel made by a personLuxury & Premium
uses high-contrast serif typography, restrained palette (black, gold, deep burgundy), and precise spacingBold & Modern
uses heavy strokes, condensed or blocky type, high-contrast saturated colors, and assertive compositionAbstract & Geometric
uses non-representational shapes, overlapping geometry, and color relationships rather than literal imageryMascot
uses an expressive character — animal, person, or invented creature — as the primary brand markWatercolor
uses translucent washes, soft color blending, and visible brush texture for an artisanal, painterly feel3D & Isometric
uses perspective, shadows, and surface treatment to give the mark dimensional depthFlat Design
uses solid color fills, no gradients, no shadows, and clean shape boundariesLine Art
uses continuous strokes of consistent weight, often a single line, with no fillsGradient
uses smooth color transitions across the mark to add energy and a modern feelMonogram
combines 1–3 letters into a single unified mark — often via shared strokes or a containing shapeEmblem & Crest
places type and imagery inside a shield, crest, circle, or badge to project authority and tradition