94 Years of Olympic Logos
Embark on a design adventure through the logos for the Olympic Games since 1924 to 2018. Pay attention to the details and symbols of each logo; each not only reflects the name of the host city but a special token representing its country.
1924 - Paris (Summer Olympic Games)
1932 - Lake Placid (Winter Olympic Games)
1932 - Los Angeles (Summer Olympic Games)
1936 - Garmisch-Partenkirchen (Winter Olympic Games)
1936 - Berlin (Summer Olympic Games)
1948 - St. Moritz (Winter Olympic Games)
1948 - London (Summer Olympic Games)
1952 - Oslo (Winter Olympic Games)
1956 - Cortina d'Ampezzo (Winter Olympic Games)
1956 - Melbourne (Summer Olympic Games)
1960 - Squaw Valley (Winter Olympic Games)
1960 - Rome (Summer Olympic Games)
1964 - Innsbruck (Winter Olympic Games)
1964 - Tokyo (Summer Olympic Games)
1968 - Grenoble (Winter Olympic Games)
1968 - Mexico (Summer Olympic Games)
1972 - Sapporo (Winter Olympic Games)
1972 - Munich (Summer Olympic Games)
1976 - Innsbruck (Winter Olympic Games)
1976 - Montreal (Summer Olympic Games)
1980 - Lake Placid (Winter Olympic Games)
1980 - Moscow (Summer Olympic Games)
1984 - Sarajevo (Winter Olympic Games)
1984 - Los Angeles (Summer Olympic Games)
1988 - Calgary (Winter Olympic Games)
1988 - Seoul (Summer Olympic Games)
1992 - Albertville (Winter Olympic Games)
1992 - Barcelona (Summer Olympic Games)
1994 - Lillehammer (Winter Olympic Games)
1996 - Atlanta (Summer Olympic Games)
1998 - Nagano (Winter Olympic Games)
2000 - Sydney (Summer Olympic Games)
2002 - Salt Lake City (Winter Olympic Games)
2004 - Athens (Summer Olympic Games)
2006 - Torino (Winter Olympic Games)
2008 - Beijing (Summer Olympic Games)
2010 - Vancouver (Winter Olympic Games)
2012 - London (Summer Olympic Games)
2014 - Sochi (Winter Olympic Games)
2016 - Rio de Janeiro (Summer Olympic Games)
2018 - Pyeongchang (Summer Olympic Games)
0 comments:
Post a Comment