These are 26 complete, paste-ready logo prompts for FLUX.2 by Black Forest Labs. Logo work leans on the two things Flux does better than any older model: best-in-class typography and exact hex colors. Wrap the brand name in "quotes", name the font style and weight, and Flux renders short text crisply and correctly spelled — then drop a code like #0F172A or #F59E0B into the prompt and it reproduces that exact palette. Every prompt below leads with the shape of the mark, describes a logo on a clean or neutral background, uses hex colors, states a flat vector or 3D style, and sets an aspect ratio of 1:1.

New to Flux? Start with the 40 best Flux prompts roundup, and keep the Flux prompt cheat sheet open while you copy. When you need bigger blocks of type, see the text, posters & ads prompts. One habit to build in from the start: Flux outputs a raster image, so vectorize the mark afterward before you ship it (there's a full FAQ on that below).

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Minimalist marks

Five abstract symbols built from simple shapes. Describe the geometry first, keep it to one hex color on white, and only judge the mark once the silhouette holds at small sizes. Use FLUX.2 [pro] and raise guidance on [flex] if you want stricter shape adherence.

1. Overlapping Triangles Tech Mark

A minimalist logo mark: two overlapping equilateral triangles forming a single interlocked symbol, deep navy #0F172A on a plain white #FFFFFF background, flat vector, solid fills, no gradients or shadows, clean geometric edges, optically centered with generous margins, designed to read at small sizes down to 32px and in one color, no text. Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Why it works: Leading with the exact shapes and "reads at small sizes" forces a strong silhouette, and the hex codes lock the mark and background to precise brand values.

2. Single-Line Continuous Wave Mark

A minimalist logo mark drawn as one continuous unbroken line that loops into an abstract wave, uniform stroke weight, teal #0EA5E9 line on a plain white #FFFFFF background, flat vector, no fills, no gradients, no shadows, balanced and symmetrical, centered with even margins, reads clearly at small sizes, no text. Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Best for: Modern studio and tech brands that want a light, elegant single-stroke mark that still holds when scaled down.

3. Negative-Space Arrow Mark

A minimalist logo mark: a solid rounded square with an arrow shape cut out of the center as negative space pointing up-right, indigo #4F46E5 square on a plain white #FFFFFF background, flat vector, solid fill, no gradient, crisp clean edges, optically centered, simple enough to read at 32px and in a single color, no text. Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Why it works: Describing both the solid form and the cut-out keeps the counter-shape legible — negative space is where weaker models fall apart.

4. Golden-Ratio Circle Mark

A minimalist logo mark built from overlapping circles arranged on a golden-ratio grid, forming an abstract crescent symbol, charcoal #1E293B on a plain white #FFFFFF background, flat vector, solid fill, perfectly symmetrical and geometrically precise, no gradients or shadows, centered with clean margins, works in one color at small sizes, no text. Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Best for: Finance, consulting, and health brands that want a balanced, deliberately "designed" feel.

5. Abstract Leaf From Two Curves

A minimalist logo mark: an abstract leaf formed by two mirrored curved shapes meeting at a point, deep green #15803D on a plain white #FFFFFF background, flat vector, solid fill, no gradient, no shadow, smooth clean edges, symmetrical, optically centered with generous margins, reads clearly at 32px and in one color, no text. Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Why it works: The shape is fully defined ("two mirrored curves meeting at a point") before the color, so the green decorates a mark that already works in black.

Monograms & wordmarks

Four letter-based logos. These carry type, so lean on Flux's typography: put the letters or name in "quotes" near the start and name a real typeface. Use FLUX.2 [pro] or [max] for the sharpest letterforms, and proofread the characters.

6. Interlocking Monogram "NA"

A monogram logo of the interlocking capital letters "NA", the N and A sharing a stroke to form one balanced symbol, set in a bold geometric sans-serif like Futura Bold, black #111111 on a plain white #FFFFFF background, flat vector, solid fill, no gradient or shadow, optically centered, crisp edges, reads at small sizes. Spell the letters exactly as "NA". Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Best for: Personal brands and studios. The "spell exactly" line keeps the two letters accurate.

7. Serif Lettermark in a Ring

A lettermark logo: a single capital "R" in an elegant high-contrast serif like Didot, centered inside a thin circular ring, black #0B0B0B on a plain white #FFFFFF background, flat vector, solid fills, no gradient or shadow, symmetrical, generous margins, clean crisp edges, reads at small sizes. Set the letter exactly as "R". Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Why it works: Naming a real typeface (Didot) plus quoting the letter gives Flux a precise target, so the serif renders sharp rather than approximate.

8. Wordmark "Lumen"

A clean wordmark logo reading exactly "Lumen" in a modern geometric sans-serif like Poppins Medium, evenly kerned, all lowercase, slate #334155 on a plain white #FFFFFF background, flat vector, solid fill, no gradient or shadow, horizontally centered with generous margins, crisp legible letters. Spell the word exactly as "Lumen". Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Best for: SaaS and product brands. Flux nails short quoted text like this, so the five letters come out clean and evenly spaced.

9. Negative-Space Monogram "Meridian"

A monogram logo: a solid rounded square with the capital letter "M" carved out of it as negative space in a bold grotesque sans-serif like Helvetica Bold, teal #0D9488 square with a white letter cut-out on a plain white #FFFFFF background, flat vector, solid fill, no gradient or shadow, optically centered, crisp edges, reads at 32px. Spell the letter exactly as "M". Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Why it works: A single carved letter sits well inside Flux's reliable text range, and the hex teal defines the container in one exact tone.

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Mascots & characters

Four friendly characters reduced to clean shapes. Keep them flat and geometric — describe the pose and silhouette, hold the palette to two or three hex colors, and skip photographic shading so the mascot still works as a stamp.

10. Friendly Fox Mascot

A mascot logo: a friendly geometric fox head made of simple angular shapes, front-facing and symmetrical, amber #F59E0B fur with a cream #FEF3C7 muzzle and dark #1F2937 eyes, on a plain white #FFFFFF background, flat vector, solid fills, no gradients or photographic shading, clean bold outlines, centered with even margins, reads as a stamp at small sizes, no text. Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Best for: Playful consumer apps and kids' brands. Three flat hex colors keep it printable and easy to vectorize.

11. Owl Reading Emblem

A mascot logo: a stylized owl perched with big round eyes, built from simple geometric shapes, deep indigo #3730A3 body with warm #FBBF24 eyes, on a plain white #FFFFFF background, flat vector, solid fills, no gradients, no shadows, bold clean shapes, symmetrical, optically centered, reads clearly at small sizes, no text. Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Why it works: "Built from simple geometric shapes" pushes Flux toward an iconic silhouette instead of a detailed illustration that clutters at small sizes.

12. Rocket Character Mark

A mascot logo: a cute cartoon rocket with a round friendly window and short fins, three-quarter angle, coral #F43F5E body with a light #E2E8F0 window and navy #0F172A outlines, on a plain white #FFFFFF background, flat vector, solid fills, no gradients or shadows, thick clean outlines, centered with generous margins, reads at small sizes, no text. Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Best for: Startup and productivity brands that want energy without a busy illustration.

13. Coffee Bean Bear Mascot

A mascot logo: a friendly bear head whose shape doubles as a coffee bean, minimal features, warm brown #7C4A2D with a cream #F5E6D3 highlight, on a plain white #FFFFFF background, flat vector, solid fills, no gradients or photographic shading, bold clean shapes, symmetrical and centered, reads as a stamp at small sizes, no text. Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Why it works: Fusing two ideas into one silhouette ("bear head that doubles as a coffee bean") gives the mark a clever, memorable read that stays simple.

App icons

Four glossy square icons. App icons live in a rounded container ("squircle"), so state that shape, allow a subtle gradient or 3D bevel, and center a single simple symbol with plenty of padding so it reads on a home screen.

14. Rounded Squircle App Icon

An app icon: a rounded-corner squircle tile filled with a smooth diagonal gradient from indigo #4F46E5 to violet #7C3AED, a simple white abstract spark symbol centered on it with generous padding, subtle soft inner shadow for a modern 3D glass feel, on a plain light gray #F1F5F9 background, clean crisp edges, reads at home-screen size, no text. Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Best for: A polished iOS/Android launcher icon. The gradient uses two exact hex stops so the brand color is precise.

15. Chat Bubble App Icon

An app icon: a rounded squircle tile in solid emerald #10B981, a simple rounded white speech bubble centered with generous padding, flat vector with a very subtle top-down highlight, crisp clean edges, on a plain light gray #F1F5F9 background, reads clearly at home-screen size, no text. Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Why it works: One symbol, one background hex, lots of padding — the classic recipe for an icon that stays legible at 60px.

16. Music Waveform App Icon

An app icon: a rounded squircle tile with a diagonal gradient from magenta #EC4899 to orange #F97316, a simple white audio waveform of five rounded bars centered with padding, flat vector with a soft glossy sheen, crisp edges, on a plain light gray #F1F5F9 background, reads at home-screen size, no text. Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Best for: Music, podcast, and audio apps that want a vivid, energetic tile.

17. Camera Aperture App Icon

An app icon: a rounded squircle tile in deep slate #1E293B, a clean white camera aperture symbol with six blades centered and evenly geometric, flat vector with a subtle 3D bevel, crisp precise edges, generous padding, on a plain light gray #F1F5F9 background, reads at home-screen size, no text. Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Why it works: "Six blades, evenly geometric" gives Flux a symmetry rule to follow, so the aperture comes out balanced rather than lopsided.

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Vintage & badges

Four circular emblems with curved text — the hardest test of a model's typography, and where Flux's spelling really shows. Quote the exact words, name a slab or condensed serif, and hold the palette to two muted hex colors.

18. Vintage Coffee Roasters Badge

A vintage circular badge logo, a coffee bean and steam icon in the center, the words "HARBOR ROASTERS" curved around the top and "EST. 2026" straight across the bottom, set in a bold condensed slab serif, dark espresso #3B2417 artwork on a warm cream #F3E9D2 background, flat vector, solid fills, no gradients, clean crisp edges, symmetrical and centered. Spell the text exactly as "HARBOR ROASTERS" and "EST. 2026". Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Why it works: Curved badge text is where Flux's typography pulls ahead — quoting both text blocks and naming the slab serif keeps the letters crisp and correctly spelled.

19. Mountain Outdoors Crest

A vintage outdoors crest logo, a simple two-peak mountain and pine tree inside a rounded shield, the word "SUMMIT" in a bold condensed sans-serif on a banner across the middle, forest green #14532D artwork on a plain oatmeal #EFE9DD background, flat vector, solid fills, no gradients or shadows, clean edges, symmetrical and centered. Spell the word exactly as "SUMMIT". Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Best for: Outdoor, hiking, and apparel brands wanting a heritage look with one clean word of type.

20. Craft Brewery Seal

A vintage circular brewery seal, a barley and hops icon centered, the words "IRONgate BREWING CO" curved around the ring, set in a classic serif, deep charcoal #212121 artwork on a plain aged-paper #EDE4D3 background, flat vector, solid fills, no gradients, crisp clean edges, symmetrical and centered. Spell the text exactly as "IRONGATE BREWING CO". Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Why it works: A longer curved string like this still holds because it's quoted and short-worded; the two-tone palette keeps it printable on cans and coasters.

21. Barbershop Retro Emblem

A retro barbershop emblem, crossed straight razor and comb inside a rounded badge, the words "SHARP & CO" curved across the top and "GROOMING" across the bottom, in a bold vintage serif, navy #1E3A5F artwork on a plain ivory #F7F1E5 background, flat vector, solid fills, no gradients or shadows, crisp edges, symmetrical and centered. Spell the text exactly as "SHARP & CO" and "GROOMING". Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Best for: Barbershops, grooming, and menswear brands that want a classic two-tier badge.

Luxury & serif

Three refined marks where the typography is the logo. Name a high-contrast serif, keep it to a single sophisticated hex color, and let the letterspacing breathe. This is where FLUX.2 [max] earns its place.

22. Luxury Serif Wordmark "Aurelia"

A luxury wordmark logo reading exactly "Aurelia" in an elegant high-contrast serif like Didot, wide letterspacing, refined thin-and-thick strokes, black #0A0A0A on a plain warm white #FAF7F2 background, flat vector, solid fill, no gradient or shadow, horizontally centered with generous margins, crisp precise letters. Spell the word exactly as "Aurelia". Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Why it works: Flux nails short quoted text and the named Didot-style serif, so the thin-and-thick strokes render clean — exactly what a luxury wordmark lives or dies on.

23. Jewelry Monogram Crest

A luxury monogram logo: the interlaced capital letters "VE" in a delicate high-contrast serif, framed by two thin laurel branches, gold #B8860B artwork on a plain deep charcoal #1A1A1A background, flat vector, solid fills, no gradient or shadow, symmetrical, optically centered with generous margins, crisp fine edges. Spell the letters exactly as "VE". Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Best for: Jewelry, beauty, and boutique brands. Gold on charcoal via exact hex reads as premium and stays reproducible.

24. Fashion House Wordmark "Solene"

A minimalist fashion wordmark reading exactly "SOLENE" in a thin elegant serif, all capitals, very wide luxury letterspacing, charcoal #2B2B2B on a plain bone #F5F1EA background, flat vector, solid fill, no gradient or shadow, horizontally centered with large margins, crisp refined letters. Spell the word exactly as "SOLENE". Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Why it works: Wide letterspacing plus a single muted hex is the entire language of a fashion-house wordmark; Flux's clean spacing does the rest.

Tech & gradient

Two modern marks that lean into a smooth gradient — the one place a logo prompt should abandon flat fills. Name the two gradient stops as exact hex codes and keep the shape simple so it still reads small.

25. Gradient Sphere Tech Mark

A modern tech logo mark: a smooth 3D sphere made of a soft gradient from cyan #22D3EE to blue #2563EB, subtle glossy highlight, centered with generous margins, on a plain white #FFFFFF background, clean crisp edges, minimal and simple enough to read at small sizes, no text. Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Best for: AI, cloud, and data brands. Naming both gradient stops as hex keeps the blend on-brand instead of random.

26. Gradient Wordmark "Nebula"

A modern tech wordmark reading exactly "Nebula" in a bold geometric sans-serif like Poppins SemiBold, the letters filled with a smooth diagonal gradient from violet #8B5CF6 to magenta #EC4899, evenly kerned, on a plain white #FFFFFF background, flat vector, clean crisp edges, horizontally centered with generous margins. Spell the word exactly as "Nebula". Square 1:1 aspect ratio.

Why it works: Flux handles the short quoted word and the two exact hex stops together, so you get legible gradient lettering rather than a smeared blend. Vectorize with a gradient fill afterward to keep it crisp.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Flux spell logo text correctly?

Yes — FLUX.2 has best-in-class typography and spells short strings accurately when you help it. Wrap the exact brand name in "quotes", keep it under about five words, and name the font style and weight. Use the [pro] or [max] tier for anything with letters; the distilled [klein] tier is faster but less reliable on text. Even so, always proofread the letterforms and regenerate if a character is off — no model is perfect on type every time.

Can I use exact hex color codes for my brand palette?

Yes. Put the hex code straight into the prompt — for example #0F172A for a deep navy or #F59E0B for amber — and FLUX.2 reproduces that exact color. That makes it ideal for logo work where the mark must match a defined brand palette. Name one or two colors at most; a logo with fewer colors reads better at small sizes and is easier to vectorize afterward.

Can Flux make logos with transparent backgrounds?

Not natively — FLUX.2 renders onto a solid background, so ask for a plain white or flat single-color background in the prompt. To get a transparent PNG, remove the background afterward in an editor or a background-removal tool, or better, redraw the mark as a true vector. A clean flat mark on plain white is the easiest starting point for both cutout and vectorization.

Which Flux tier is best for logo design?

Use FLUX.2 [pro] as the default and [max] when you need the sharpest typography and highest fidelity. Both fix steps and guidance to optimal internal values, so you just write the prompt. Choose [flex] only if you want to raise guidance to 5–10 for stricter adherence on a precise mark. Avoid [klein] for lettered logos — it is fast but its fixed params make text less reliable.

How do I vectorize a Flux logo?

Generate a clean flat mark on plain white, then trace it into a true vector. Use the Image Trace feature in Adobe Illustrator, the free Vectorizer or Vector Magic tools, or Inkscape's Trace Bitmap. Flat, solid-fill, single-color marks convert cleanly; gradients and photographic shading do not. Once it is a vector you can scale to any size, recolor exactly, and export SVG, EPS, or a transparent PNG.

Is it safe to use an AI-generated logo as a trademark?

Be cautious. An AI-generated mark may unintentionally resemble an existing logo, and the legal status of copyright and trademark protection for purely AI-generated art is still unsettled in many jurisdictions. Before you build a brand on a Flux logo, run a trademark search, have a designer refine and redraw it, and consult a professional if the mark matters commercially. Treat Flux output as a strong starting concept, not a final registered asset.

Why do my logo prompts come back too detailed or illustrative?

Because the prompt described a scene instead of a mark. Lead with the words "a minimalist logo mark", state the exact shapes, and add "flat vector, solid fills, no gradients or shadows, clean geometric edges". Ask that it read at small sizes down to 32px and in one color. Describing the silhouette before any color or texture keeps FLUX.2 from turning your logo into a decorative illustration.

How many colors should a logo prompt use?

One or two for most marks. A single-color logo is the strongest test of the silhouette and the easiest to vectorize, so start in black on white and only introduce a brand hex once the shape holds up. Two colors — a mark color plus a background — cover the majority of real logos. Reserve gradients for tech and app-icon styles where a soft blend is part of the look.

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