The premise of the The Logo Psychologist
Can you tell what a restaurant is like simply by studying the logo design? What aromas are adrift? What sounds waft through the air? What is the decor? What kind of food goes with that font? The following logos with their accompanying psychological analyses are our best shot at discerning what a restaurant might be like, simply based on a study of their logo. Can it be done? Well, the premise is this: if the logo designer has done the job right, the logo should in fact say something concrete about what lays beyond the front doors. Logo psychology plays a roll, consciously or unconsciously, in every logo design. Can you guess the prices on the menu from the color pallete of a logo (hint: more black = more $$)? Can you guess the clientele’s demographic from the amount of kerning (hint: more kerning = more $$)? I think you can venture a good guess! Each logo is linked to the actual restaurant. So read our psychologizing, engage in your own armchair-therapy too, and click to see how close we are to the truth. If you really want to know for sure, you’ll have to visit each restaurant because we don’t have time! Please post a comment if you do :). NOTE: We did not spend any time whatsoever at each of these restaurant websites before, during, or after our “sessions” with the respective logos. That is the fun of it, since it may be the case that we are totally off-the-mark or spot-on with our profiles. Either way, this post is about logos, not restaurants. So join us now as I talk to, talk with, and talk at these 25 restaurant logos…25 Mouth-Watering Restaurant Logos and Profiles


























Re: the fat duck and “Ah, you know what, I think I’ll pass on this, unless I meet someone who has personally been here and gives it a big thumbs up. I’m holding out for surprise good review.” Emm do you they know this one of the best resturants in the World, second only to ElBulli??
An amazing place to eat!!
Hi Chris: I have never heard of the Fat Duck, nor ElBulli. I don’t get out much :). However, notice my intro: “For some reason, I expect Julia Child to have eaten here. Or perhaps some other cable TV gourmet gormandizer…” And then consider the note at the top of the page:
NOTE: We did not spend any time whatsoever at each of these restaurant websites before, during, or after our “sessions” with the respective logos. That is the fun of it, since it may be the case that we are totally off-the-mark or spot-on with our profiles. Either way, this post is about logos, not restaurants.
…And you have supplied the “good review” I was holding out for! Thanks!
Loved your review of “times.” Even if you’re aren’t right, I believe you.
And for “The Rainbow Room,” I picture pool tables near the bar. Whatever is there, the “Then. Now. Forever.” has got to go. I can’t see or feel any reason to keep it.
Hi Sam: I agree with the “Then. Now. Forever” suggestion. It kind of breaks character a bit. I think they could communicate that sentiment somehow by staying in character.
Yes. Part lounge, part diamond ring store doesn’t quite work.
doug, what great commentary on these logos. You seem to have a real feel for restaurants, like you’re a world class traveller. 🙂 this way of thinking is so important because this is what I do in a way when I’m checking them out. The logo gives me a sense of what to expect. nice way of showing how important it is to have the right logo. Now if I am standing right in front of the place as I sort them out I do have more than a logo to look at. It would be cool to go to all these places to see how closely you called it.
Not a world-class traveler, but a third-class passenger :).
Thanks for the interesting post! These logos are well-thought out and very original. It’s nice to see that many of these take advantage of elegant typography, without having to rely on “catchy” imagery or icons.
Fat Duck looks super
Do you mean supper? 🙂
Hi Mark: I find myself enjoying logotypes more and more these days. It’s easier to come up with a nonsensical logomark and drop some type next to it. But with logotypes, one’s lack of creativity has nowhere to hide.
Amazing collection. I have to say, your site came up at the right time. Working on an identity for a company in F&B industry. Thanks a google, Doug.
Not really fond of Caminito. They could have done better.
Hi Shabbir: Glad you found this helpful! Caminito is really a strange one. It sticks out for it’s strangeness rather than for its beauty. The more I look at something, the more I “psychologize it”. Now, what bugs me most about Caminito is the strange peachy color in the background. It has a unnerving flesh-tone to it. Wait! Maybe it a tattoo! 🙂
Bradbaer logo looks like an Akzidenz, not a Helvetica to me.
Peter, you are right that it’s not Akzidenz. How unobservant of me. I was just going with a lazy assessment of “it’a sans serif”. In fact, the font used is a ITC Franklin Gothic Heavy, with the exception that maybe the “ae” is customized. I don’t think a capital version of that glyph is a unicode character. But I’ll leave my second lazy guess right there :).
Funny…you pegged me and my restaurant almost exactly! : )
Oh my goodness. You are the owner? How cool! This article was a blast to write. I’d love to swing by and see for myself but Kansas is a ways off! Bon appetite!