Calvin Klein is an American fashion house and luxury brand founded in 1968. It specializes in ready-to-wear apparel, designer denim, and iconic logo-waistband underwear.
Download the Calvin Klein logo as a transparent PNG. The API can also return SVG, WebP, dark, and black-and-white versions.
1968–1975
Founding wordmark
Calvin Klein's original wordmark appeared at the launch of the fashion house in 1968, set in a lightweight sans-serif that matched the understated, refined aesthetic of his early coat and sportswear collections. The logotype relied entirely on typography, presenting the founder's name without monogram or graphic device.
1975–1992
Jeans-era wordmark
A bolder, more substantial wordmark replaced the founding version as the brand expanded into denim in the mid-1970s. The heavier stroke weight suited the rear-pocket placement that defined Calvin Klein Jeans and helped establish the logo as a visible status marker.
1992–2017
Baron-era refinement
Use the Logo API to embed the Calvin Klein logo and millions of others directly in your app or website. Get a free API key to get started.
<img src="https://img.logo.dev/calvinklein.us?token=YOUR_API_TOKEN" alt="calvinklein.us logo" />Designed by Fabien Baron
Fabien Baron joined as creative director in 1992, bringing a rigorous typographic sensibility that shaped the brand's visual language for the following two decades. The wordmark of this period appeared alongside the stacked "Calvin Klein" and "cK" sub-branding that proliferated across fragrance, underwear, and accessories lines.
2017–2020
Saville all-caps
Designed by Peter Saville
On February 3, 2017, creative director Raf Simons and graphic designer Peter Saville revised the wordmark to all-uppercase lettering with tighter inter-character spacing, coinciding with Simons's debut collection. The change signaled a harder-edged direction for the house, though Simons departed in December 2018.
2020–present · current
Current wordmark
In September 2020 PVH returned to a mixed-case wordmark recalling the 1975 version, with loosened letter-spacing and slightly heavier strokes. The reversion marked the end of the Simons-era visual identity and a deliberate reconnection with the brand's earlier commercial positioning.
Burberry
burberry.com