Inspiration – Bulls Logo Facts, Meaning, History & PNG

Bulls Logo

Bulls logo and symbol, meaning, history, PNG

  • Meaning and history The new team was called Northern Transvaal.
  • We should point out, though, that these uniforms didn’t stay with the club for long – the players got light blue jerseys with the now iconic Barberton Daisy, which was used as the club’s emblem until 1997.
  • The Barberton Daisy (also known as Gerbera jamesonii and the Transvaal daisy) was chosen as a plant indigenous to South Eastern Africa.
  • While exploring the Barberton area in Mpumalanga Province, South Africa, the botanist Robert Jameson came across this plant and prepared its scientific description.
  • By the way, the Barberton daisy is used as a symbol of the Province of Mpumalanga.
  • On the logo of Northern Transvaal, the flower on a dark green stem was placed inside a white shield.
  • The shield, in its turn, was positioned inside a light blue square.
  • From the other hand, the design lacked the minimalism, dynamism, and tension required for a good sporting logo.
  • It was an image of the Bull’s head drawn in solid black with thin white details, placed inside the circular “window” in the center of the rounded badge, formed by four segments — in sky blue, grass green, red and calm dusty purple.
  • 2001 — Today Today, the logo features a bull’s head in white and blue.
  • Unlike the previous emblem, the bull’s head is highly stylized.
  • Font While the letters “U” and “L” have a more or less regular shape, the initial “B” and the final “S” are very unusual.
  • For instance, to make them merge with the bull’s head, the author of the Bulls logo extended the ends making them parts of the horns.
  • Colors Light blue has been the team’s official color ever since it appeared on the jerseys and the emblem back in 1938.

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