Arkansas Razorbacks logo and symbol, meaning, history, PNG
- The creature has been modified over five times, which resulted in a more professional design that we can see today.
- 1931 – 1938 The initial Razorbacks logo was created in 1931 and featured a red hog running to the right, with black sharp details on his back.
- The animal looked more funny than dangerous, but this version of the emblem became a basis for all the following redesigns.
- The image gained more details and accents and the hog looked more realistic than on the previous version, reflecting the speed and fighting spirit.
- 1955 – 1967 The black and cardinal-red color palette came back to the Razorbacks visual identity in 1955, and the animal was redrawn again.
- Its face became more severe and brutal, and the contours — stronger and more powerful, now the hog looked as if it was a rock of muscles, showing the team’s dedication and willingness to fight, move and win.
- 1967 – 2001 The first version of the cardinal hog we all can see today was introduced by the Razorbacks in 1967.
- 2001 – 2014 With the redesign of 2001, the contours of the red hog were cleaned and refined, adding more sharpness to the back of the animal and making the whole image balanced and strong.
- 2014 – Today The redesign of 2014 kept the previous version of the Razorbacks logo almost untouched, only the color palette was elevated by darkening the red shade, which added more exquisiteness and style to the image.
- Colors The official colors of the University of Arkansas, cardinal and white, dominate not only the academic logo but the athletic logo, too.
- We can also see some black on the Arkansas Razorbacks logo.
- Arkansas Razorbacks basketball The team, which is listed among the top 10 NCAA programs of all time, plays its home games in Bud Walton Arena.
- The Razorbacks have been to NCAA Final Four six times.
- Arkansas Razorbacks Colors CARDINAL RED PANTONE: PMS 201 HEX: #9D2235; CMYK: (7, 100, 68, 32) RGB: (157, 34, 53) WHITE HEX COLOR: #FFFFFF; RGB: (255, 255, 255) CMYK: (0, 0, 0, 0)
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