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1921–1929
Early cursive
The earliest known Walgreens mark rendered the founder's name in a flowing cursive script, a hand-lettered style common among American drugstore chains of the era. No formal typographic system accompanied it.
1948–1960
Lippincott script
Designed by Lippincott & Margulies
Commissioned in October 1948, Lippincott & Margulies formalized the cursive wordmark and adapted its letterforms to support neon tubing on three-dimensional store signs. The subsidiary text "Drug Stores" appeared in Futura Bold beneath the signature.

1969–1981
Block lettering
A shift to heavier block lettering replaced the cursive script, reflecting a broader retail trend toward bolder, more legible signage at scale. The mark favored uniform stroke weights and tighter letter spacing.
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<img src="https://img.logo.dev/walgreens.com?token=YOUR_API_TOKEN" alt="walgreens.com logo" />1992–2005
Pestle symbol
In July 1992 Walgreens introduced a blue mortar-and-pestle symbol alongside the wordmark, anchoring the brand's pharmacy identity more explicitly. The pairing remained on many physical locations for years after subsequent updates.
2005–2020
Proportional update
The 2005 revision adjusted letter proportions to allow taller characters within the same footprint on exterior wall signs, and subtle variations in the peak heights of the "W" strokes were introduced. The pestle emblem was dropped from primary usage.
2020–present · current
Connected script
Design Bridge, with wordmark refinement by Rob Clarke, reconnected the "g" and "r" into a single unbroken cursive word and deepened the red to a richer tone. The update drew on Charles Walgreen's original signature, restoring a sense of continuity with the 1921 founding mark.
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