Your logo shows up everywhere: your website header, your watermark, your Instagram profile, your email signature. For photographers, that means it gets seen by potential clients right alongside your actual work. That’s a lot of pressure on one small graphic.
A good photography logo doesn’t have to literally show a camera. It just needs to feel like you. Some photographers want something technical and precise. Others want something more artistic or abstract. Neither is wrong, but knowing which direction fits your brand makes the whole search a lot easier.
The logos below cover a range of styles, from geometric to symbolic to just plain unexpected. Browse through and see what clicks.
Logos worth a closer look
The Geometric Camera Logo is a clean, angular take on the classic camera shape. If you shoot architecture, product photography, or corporate headshots, this kind of structured mark reads as professional without being stiff.
The Fish Camera Logo swaps out the lens for a fish shape, which sounds odd until you see it. It works surprisingly well for underwater photographers, travel shooters, or anyone who wants a logo with a bit of personality.
The Eye Logo is simple and direct. An eye is one of the oldest shorthand symbols for photography and vision, and this version keeps things minimal so it doesn’t distract from your portfolio.
The Lines in Circle Eye Logo takes that same eye concept and adds circular linework around it. The result has a slightly hypnotic quality that suits fine art photographers or anyone working in a more editorial style.
The Yin Yang Eye Logo layers two familiar symbols into one mark. It’s a conversation starter, and it could work well for photographers who want to signal balance or duality in their work, think black and white specialists or photographers who shoot both documentary and portrait work.
The Rabbit with Symbols Logo is a left turn in the best way. It pairs a rabbit silhouette with small graphic symbols in a way that feels vintage and slightly mysterious. A good fit for photographers with a distinctive personal brand or those who shoot in niche creative spaces.
The Data Chip Logo references the memory card, the thing that holds every photo you take. It’s a subtle nod to the craft that mostly reads as a tech mark. Good for photographers who lean into the technical side of the trade or who also offer video and digital media services.
Getting your logo ready to use
Once you’ve picked a logo, you’ll want to make a few tweaks before it goes live anywhere.
- Change the color. Most of these SVGs open in any vector editor like Figma, Illustrator, or even Inkscape. Start by matching the palette to your existing website or preset aesthetic.
- Adjust the proportions. A logo that looks great as a square icon might need slight changes to work as a horizontal watermark. Spend five minutes testing both formats before you commit.
- Export at the right sizes. For watermarks, a transparent PNG works best. For your website header, keep the SVG format if your platform supports it, file sizes stay small and the mark stays crisp at any resolution.
Browse the full photography logos collection to see everything in one place. There’s a range of styles there, and filtering by shape or theme can help narrow things down faster than scrolling.