Recently, we examined the logo design history behind two Major League Baseball team logos. Now that the football season is underway, it only seems appropriate to turn our attention to the NFL. So let’s take a closer look at two National Football League team logos.
We begin with the only team to include their logo on just one side of their helmets—the Pittsburgh Steelers. The story of the Steelers’ 
The football team appealed to American Iron and Steel Institute to change the word “steel” written in the logo to “Steelers” for the team’s purposes, and when their request was granted, the football team’s logo was complete. To infuse fresh energy into the team for the postseason, they changed the color of their helmets from gold to black. The color change also served to highlight the new logo, and they’ve left the design untouched ever since.
Shuttling deeper into the Midwest, we now turn to the Green Bay Packers. The team’s dark green, gold, and white “G” logo—the only 
According to a Milwaukee-Wisconsin Journal Sentinel article on Braisher, he didn’t intend for the “G” to refer to the team’s location but rather to stand for “Greatness”—and his aim was to fit the “G” into a football shape. John Gordon, an art major and Packers intern who assisted Braisher in his equipment manager duties, offered some final logo design support. The Packers’ “G” has inspired a good share of copycats in the high school and college sports world, including the University of Georgia and Grambling University, only reaffirming its iconic status.
It all goes to show that the roots of logos lie in all manner of places, finding their inspiration from the towering marketing department of a great American industry to a humble hotel room occupied by a team’s equipment manager!
