Brand kit

Everything you need to represent Social Forge

Download official marks, learn our voice, and keep visuals consistent across every touchpoint. These resources update quarterly—bookmark for the latest guidance.

Brand at a glance
Core elements that define the Social Forge look and feel.

Palette first

Emerald and charcoal anchor the system. Use Glacier for spacious backgrounds.

Typography uses Geist for UI, with Geist Mono for numeric display. Keep letter spacing tight and leading relaxed for readability.

Motion is purposeful and anchored to user input. Honor prefers-reduced-motion by swapping to fades or instant states when requested.

Assets

Download official brand files

Use these files for press, partnerships, and co-marketing. Need something bespoke? Email brand@socialforge.tech.

Logo & wordmark

Primary and monochrome marks in SVG, PNG, and EPS formats.

Messaging & copy guide

Voice, tone, and boilerplate copy for press, partnerships, and product screens.

Campaign templates

Editable ads, presentation slides, and email snippets sized for common placements.

Component library

Storybook-style index of the live components powering Social Forge.

Palette

Color foundations

Use this base palette across UI and marketing materials. Keep tints consistent by referencing the exact values below.

#00B380

Forge Emerald
Primary accent for buttons, highlights, and success states.

#121212

Graphite
Primary text color for light themes.

#5E6B7E

Slate Mist
Muted text, dividers, and secondary icons.

#E6F2F0

Glacier
Surface backgrounds and subtle section tints.

Usage principles

Keep Social Forge visuals recognizable and accessible everywhere they appear.

Give space to the mark

Maintain clear-space equal to the height of the "S" around the logo. Do not crowd it with other elements or place it on busy imagery.

Keep contrast high

Always pair text with backgrounds that meet APCA contrast recommendations. Use the emerald accent on neutral backgrounds for maximum legibility.

Name it Social Forge

Use the full name in copy and accessible labels—even when the shortened logo appears without text.