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Green lantern logo
Green lantern logo







And while Hal was the focus of this one, the rest of the Corps wasn’t forgotten. Here’s the logo on the monthly book which followed the miniseries in 2005. In all, a fine job, Daniel, and thanks for sharing your process. I think this was a good move, as it provides a nice balance to the larger G and L, and the letterforms used for REBIRTH are very modern, yet provide great contrast to the rest, being thinner and perhaps suggesting computer type. Check back to the top of this article and you’ll see that DC chose the final version, but with the letters closer together and pushed to the right side. These are all interesting, though the third one puts REBIRTH at the top, which doesn’t read correctly, and on the second one the tagline has a completely different perspective and angle, so I can see why that wasn’t chosen. Of these, DC chose the third one, and would use it on the upcoming new monthly title, but first they needed one for the miniseries, and Daniel came up with a number of ways to add the tagline REBIRTH: The second one shows the word LANTERN slightly taller than GREEN. The second and third ones add a horizontal serif to the G, making it more readable, and all have dropped the serif from the bottom of the T, which I liked, but this is also more clear. I think I would have tried to slant the lantern symbol (really the GL ring or chest symbol) to match the letters, but perhaps he wasn’t allowed to do that, or just didn’t want to.Īfter this round, DC must have settled on the center two but asked for a few more variations, shown here: All the letters now have thicker strokes and are more squared-off, though still with some rounded corners. There’s still a pretty large gap between the G and L, but somehow I don’t mind it in this design, perhaps because everything else is so snug. The middle two also have enlarged and nested G and L’s, and he’s solved the design problem of all the small openings in version 6 by filling in the background with solid black. The rest are variations on the previous version 6 (which is also here unchanged, the bottom one). He’s also switched to a more traditional N, but with an extended lower right corner to match the extended R’s. The top one takes the letter forms seen in version 3, enlarges the G and L, and nests them tightly, stacking the words one above the other, with the lantern symbol taking a familiar role by helping fill out the shorter word GREEN’s top line. I think he may have shown these to DC, and they suggested he further develop versions 3 and 6, because the next set of drafts concentrate on those two: I don’t know if this was supplied to him by DC, but it might have been. Notice that all the drafts use the same lantern symbol. These are all attractive, though I see some layout concerns with the first three, which would be harder to work around for the artist and the person putting in cover trade dress elements without creating dead spaces at the top. This usually yields about 5 to 6 initial drafts.įor this assignment, Daniel shared these drafts, what I would call sketches, though in his case they’re all essentially finished pieces created on the computer: When I have several drafts I like, I’ll start altering line widths and thinking about shadows and effects. Of those I whittle down to 6-7 that I start playing with letterform relationships, altering letterforms in various ways and creating new ones for letters that aren’t working. If its a multiword logo I’l just do thumbs of boxes to get a stacking and relative proportion I like, then I choose maybe 30-40 typefaces I feel have qualities I want. If its an existing logo, I’ll check them out for any elements of style I like. Here’s his description of how he approaches a logo design:

green lantern logo

I contacted Daniel, and he graciously agreed to share some of his design process for this logo.

green lantern logo

Daniel is best known as an artist for card games such as Magic: The Gathering, but in the last few years he’s designed a half-dozen new logos for DC that are fresh and attractive. A new logo was called for, and Louis Prandi, the DC cover editor at the time, called on a new logo designer as well, Daniel Gelon. Finally, in 2004, Hal got a break in this miniseries that would relaunch him as Earth’s premiere Green Lantern. First he became a villain, then he died, then he took on the aspect of The Spectre. Silver Age Green Lantern Hal Jordan was put through the wringer in the late 90’s into the early part of this decade.









Green lantern logo