• Home
  • Design
  • Freebies
  • Toolbox
  • Tech
  • Tutorials
  • Inspiration
No Result
View All Result
Subscribe
The Designest
  • Home
  • Design
  • Freebies
  • Toolbox
  • Tech
  • Tutorials
  • Inspiration
No Result
View All Result
The Designest
No Result
View All Result
Home Design

Apple Logo History and Brand Evolution

Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication: Apple’s logo transformation over the years.

Milena Anisimova by Milena Anisimova
March 8, 2022
in Design
0

Custom Logo for 2018 Apple Special Event

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The story about the Apple logo is as rich as the brand itself: each stage of the development is captured in logotype versions, transferring the company’s ups and downs. But how did it all go from the first original Apple logo with a drawn Isaac Newton to a minimalistic apple icon? It’s quite a story you definitely would want to hear! 

For decades Apple company has been holding the leading positions in the world of computer software and consumer electronics. The innovative products and online services, released by Apple are known to the majority of users as well as the famous logotype. But what’s hidden behind the minimalistic apple outline? 

  relevant:
Adidas Logo History in a Nutshell February 24, 2022
Apple introduces New York font, an all-new serif August 26, 2019
Next
Prev

It’s the inspiring story of friends, who decided to fulfill their dream by starting a personal computer project in a garage, which then became one of the world’s best tech company. Founded in 1976 by Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs, the tech company has gone through a lot: from budget issues to constant changes of the executives, playing hopscotch with the company’s destiny. All Apple logos over the years are like symbols of innovative ideas, witnessing the succession of brilliant inventions and updates, changing the course of the technology industry.   

Apple logo

What does the Apple logo mean?

In brief, the current Apple logo was affected by at least two important things associated with the company’s establishment comprising both scientific and romantic symbolism. The first one is the direct association with one of the brightest (and highly significant) periods in life of Steve Jobs when he dropped the college and went to Oregon to work at an apple orchard farm commune. 

Besides, the apple fruit is the straight symbol of Isaac Newton’s brilliant discovery everyone has learned from school. Just like an apple fell on the scientist’s head, the law of gravity came home to him when Isaac was peacefully resting under the apple tree. The significance of this event put the beginning of scientific discoveries as we know them nowadays, it was as revolutionary as the creation of the first Apple computer. 

Apple Is Not Only A Fruit Anymore

Apple logo design history starts with its name being established, around which the whole brand identity is built. When Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak were deciding on the company’s name, they went through many “boring and pompous” variants before Jobs suggested something from his early years. When Steve left college in 1974, he hit the road to Oregon, where he joined the apple farm (orchard commune) and lived a peaceful life for some time. Steve Wozniak wrote about it in his memoir: 

I remember I was driving Steve Jobs back from the airport along Highway 85. Steve was coming back from a visit to Oregon to a place he called an “apple orchard.” It was actually some kind of commune. Steve suggested a name — Apple Computer. The first comment out of my mouth was, “What about Apple Records?” This was (and still is) the Beatles-owned record label. We both tried to come up with technical-sounding names that were better, but couldn’t think of any good ones. Apple was so much better, better than any other name we could think of.
“Steve Jobs: Insanely Great”, a graphic biography by Jessie Hartland
“Steve Jobs: Insanely Great”, a graphic biography by Jessie Hartland

The First Attempt to Design Apple Logo

In 1977 one of the company’s co-founders, Ronald Wayne, illustrated the first apple logo design. It was an actual illustration, which you see in history books, depicting some meaningful moments in black and white. This version was far from perfection, especially in terms of branding design, which, of course, couldn’t represent the innovative Apple company on the market. Such a logotype like this could be decorating a craft beer can or restaurant menu pages but not technology-related products. Fortunately, that variant lasted less than a year. 

1976 Apple Logo

What was Apple’s first logo?

The company’s first apple logo was not quite a reflection of the brand’s essence and far from versatile in terms of graphic design, composition, and style, to be fair. It literally depicted the moment when the law of gravity was invented. The first logo included Isaac Newton sitting under an apple tree. What cluttered the old Newton logo more was a frame with a quote by the romantic English poet William Wordsworth, saying, “Newton… a mind forever voyaging through strange seas of thought.” Thankfully, this illustration was not met well by Steve Jobs, so this Apple’s logo design existed for a short time and was later replaced by a new logo carried out by a professional graphic designer. 

Reaching Out For The Brand Identity

Steve Jobs saw Newton’s image as old-fashioned and inconvenient: resizing the shape would make it impossible to distinguish the logotype placed on computers, flyers, or print advertisements. Steve Jobs wanted a more appropriate logo, fresh yet straightforward: to transfer the innovative motif of the Apple computer co and be impressive at the same time. Understandable demands for the business owner, commissioning a corporate identity design. 

The full-scale presentation of the first Apple’s computer Apple II (the previous test version Apple I was not fully ready for an official release) at West Coast Computer Fair in 1977 was meant to be the moment of revealing the computer company brand itself, and the crew couldn’t risk it with some raw branding design. With advice from Mike Markkula (one of the company’s partners and investors), accompanied by the hired publicity firm, and armed with his sense of beauty, Steve Jobs contacted Rob Janoff to make an original apple logo design. The Apple’s brand logotype was designed in two weeks. 

  relevant:
The Origins of Jumping Cat in Puma Logo February 21, 2020
Supreme logo, a story of brand collaborations and metamorphoses July 25, 2019
Next
Prev

Janoff developed the world-renowned, eye-catching logo, guided by the imagery of apple fruit, working with the shape and details, reducing them to what we know today as the official “bitten apple logo.” In one of his interviews, Rob Janoff told that the actual process of inventing the logo took one week: he was buying apples, putting them in a bowl, and redrawing over and over again to get that desirable shape, that was eventually granted that bitten apple form. 

1977 Apple logo

The 1977 version of the Apple logo evolution was covered with rainbow spectrum stripes, which triggered many discussions later on about the LGBT reference and secret messages the rainbow Apple logo conveyed. However, the rainbow flag was proclaimed a symbol of the LGBT community a year later, in 1978, so the wonderful urban legend about rainbow stripes of Apple’s logo doesn’t stand a chance. 

The rainbow colorful logo had more computer meaning than anything else: Apple II computer supported color display imagery, which was the indisputable advantage over the monochrome monitors. No unique colors order for the rainbow version was originally implemented, except for Jobs’s wish to place green at the top simply because the tree leaves are green and usually at the top. 

Why is there a bite in the Apple logo? 

According to Janoff, the reason for choosing this bitten apple logo was to prevent people from confusing the overall shape of the apple with some other fruit or vegetable like cherry tomato, having a similar form. Besides, Rob Janoff has found out a bit later that his genius choice of a logo detail was the lucky coincidence with computer terminology he had produced. “Bite” sounds the same as “byte” — the smallest unit of digital information, the basis of computing. 

Translucent and Monochrome Apple Logos in 1998

At that time, in 1998, Apple introduced the first-ever iMac, the Bondi Blue — a sky-blue computer with rounded edges and transparent parts. It already looked “chubby” and cute, adding there a rainbow Apple logo would mean turning the computer into some childish toy. Instead, the computer company has taken a real turn and transformed the rainbow logo into the one, repeating the blue color palette of iMac with glass-like reflections.
Apple logo
iMac G3 Design
From 1998 till 2000, the Apple’s logo was colored in black: the more modern monochromatic look of the flat logo was reserved, versatile, and still universally recognizable. The company has gone through many economic difficulties, even moving it close to bankruptcy, but Steve Jobs and the Apple board coped with everything after all. And the black monochrome logo represented the serious grown-up company, came through thick and thin and was the leader in modern computing.
Monochrome Apple logo
1998 Monochrome Apple logo

Apple Logo Evolution in 2001-2007

For the Apple brand that was the period of experiments with volume and glossy shine. In 2001 Apple released the macOS X “Cheetah”, affecting the Apple logo significantly. It repeated the Aqua interface. The logotype had the red version, used for Apple Care warranty and technical support plans, and the graphite version for placing it on Power Mac G4 block. The aqua version lasted till 2007. Later on, the Apple logo was changed, converted from the polished glass into more metallic look and chrome texture.
Apple Logo History
Apple Logo History
Nowadays, the minimalistic version of “forbidden fruit” has taken over, only changing the color, switching from matte to glossy textures, but the whole imagery remains unchanged, proudly marking Apple Inc products. No more glass reflections, volume, screaming colors, or combined styles! As it goes in one of the favorite Jobs’s quotes by Leonardo Da Vinci, that basically, summarizes the brand’s philosophy, “Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication,” in a case with Apple, it works perfectly.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does the Apple logo mean?
The iconic logo of Apple was inspired by Steve Job’s early years of experience in working on the apple orchard farm. It was a simple, terse solution for a tech company name and a great starting point for building a corporate design.
Why is there a bite out of the Apple logo?
When the apple logo shape was carried out as a minimalistic outlined fruit, the ready-made silhouette looked like something else rather than an apple. So Rob Janoff, the graphic designer developing the company logo, added a bitten part for the result to be not a cherry tomato but an actual recognizable Apple logotype. Aside from that, such an intelligent solution had also received its praise because of a world-play: “bite” sounds the same as “byte” — the basic unit of information, closely connected to the tech industry.
What was Apple's first logo?
Long before the sleekest and famous logos Apple company had presented over the years, Apple’s first image was far from ideal. The original design by Ronald Wayne represented the story of discovering the basic principle of gravity by Isaac Newton. It was an engraving style illustration with this scene, framed and accompanied by the quote of an English poet William Wordsworth saying, “Newton… a mind forever voyaging through strange seas of thought.”
Tags: AppleBrandingHistoryLogo
Previous Post

Free Ripped Image Photo Effect

Next Post

Free Metal Steel Sign Mockup

Milena Anisimova

Milena Anisimova

Related Posts

Best Drawing Programs & Apps in 2024 For Your Creativity

by The Designest Staff
February 7, 2024
9

In 2024, art software scene is as diverse as ever. Read our guide to the top free and paid drawing...

Top Graphic Design Projects That Can Enhance Your College Portfolio

by The Designest Staff
January 26, 2024
0

What projects should you include to ensure your portfolio stands out? Let's dive in.

The Key Role of Digital Video Editing for Marketing

by The Designest Staff
December 26, 2023
0

Learn how to enhance videos and why video editing is important for marketing. Follow these best practices to improve your...

Pantone Color Of The Year 2024: Peach Fuzz

by Alina Yakovleva
December 7, 2023
0

The new color celebrates serenity, providing a sanctuary where we can simply exist, experience, mend, and thrive.

Bad Graphic Design Examples: Good vs Bad Graphic Design

by Evgenia Papicheva
December 5, 2023
4

Design is a powerful tool, but like any tool, it can lead to unforeseen accidents when misused. Check our guide...

Font Trends 2024: Creativity, Elegance & Usability

by Daria Lemiakina
November 27, 2023
0

Your guide to trending fonts that'll foolproof your designs in 2024. A blend of functionality and creativity is what we're...

Next Post

Free Metal Steel Sign Mockup

Please login to join discussion

Popular Posts

  • Logo Design Trends 2024: Outburst of  Typography & Symbolism

  • Free CD Mockup Set For The Iconic Retro Design

  • Freebie: a logo mockup, charged with elegance

  • Freebie: Aluminium Can Mockup

  • 20 Digital Artists You Should Know: Famous, Talented, Inspiring

Envato Elements
with Envato Elements membership

Categories

  • Design (80)
  • Freebies (88)
  • Inspiration (40)
  • Other (22)
  • Tech (26)
  • Toolbox (161)
  • Tutorials (57)
Youtube Facebook Instagram Dribbble Pinterest Twitter RSS

Subscribe

The Designest

Weekly Email Updates

We got tons of fascinating articles, videos and freebies for you every week!

SUBSCRIBE

Design Blog

  • Design
  • Freebies
  • Inspiration
  • Other
  • Tech
  • Toolbox
  • Tutorials

About Us

Welcome to The Designest — a professional design blog aimed to deliver fresh news & trends of the industry as well as the most essential courses & tutorials you must have been searching for.

Company

  • Advertise with Us
  • Contact Us
  • Cookie Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Affiliate Disclosure
Advertise Options

© 2023 The Designest — Professional design blog aimed to deliver fresh news & trends of the industry

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Design
  • Freebies
  • Toolbox
  • Tech
  • Tutorials
  • Inspiration

© 2023 The Designest — Professional design blog aimed to deliver fresh news & trends of the industry

Subscribe to Regular Updates
We got tons of fascinating articles, videos and
freebies for you every week.
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.