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The first Twitter logo with a bird (Image credit: Twitter) Based on the existing bird image, Biz Stone designed a bird that Twitter could call its own. It had wings, a large white eye, and a sharp tail.
The iconic blue bird, “Larry” (after Larry Bird, the basketball player), found a permanent home in the Twitter logo. The Twitter mascot initially featured a tuft of feathers on its head and wings spread wide, almost leaping into flight.
What many people associate with Twitter is its logo’s symbol, the Twitter bird. It is hard to know precisely what specific bird the logo is based on; although it does resemble the mountain bluebird of North America (and this would be fitting given the logo is drawn in blue).
The logo, affectionately dubbed the ‘Twitter bird,’ was born from a mountain of sketches. Originally named ‘Larry the Bird’ after a basketball legend, it epitomizes the essence of chirping—sharing brief updates globally, like birds warbling to one another.
Twitter has a new “X” logo, and it’s replaced the blue bird that represented the company for over a decade. The designer of Twitter’s blue bird logo explains how it was put together.
Twitter's logo, a robin's egg blue bird has remained synonymous with the platform name and recognizable to most anyone whom has ever seen a Tweet. However, many might not be aware that this bird actually has a name, and a story behind the name.
Yesterday (July 24), ‘Chief Twit’ Elon Musk announced the ouster of the beloved blue Bird Twitter logo, to be replaced by a slightly less imaginative glyph that mathematicians spend their life looking at.