labels or advertisements for products which use circles in their name or logo
Here are several well-known labels or advertisements for products that use circles in their name or logo (or both). I’ll mix global brands with everyday items so you have a variety of examples and contexts.
1. Target
- The Target logo is literally a red-and-white bullseye made of concentric circles.
- Their store signage, paper bags, and TV ads all prominently feature the circle motif as the main brand element.
2. Starbucks
- Starbucks uses a circular badge-style logo with the green-and-white siren in the middle.
- Cups, store signs, loyalty cards, and digital ads all lean on this circular emblem as the primary visual.
3. BMW
- BMW’s logo is a circle divided into blue and white quadrants, surrounded by a black circular ring.
- It appears on car badges, steering wheels, hubcaps, print ads, and TV commercials, always as a clean circular mark.
4. Pepsi
- The Pepsi logo is a circle with red, white, and blue waves running through it.
- Every can, bottle label, vending machine wrap, and billboard incorporates that circular “globe” icon.
5. Nivea Creme
- Classic Nivea Crème comes in a flat, round blue tin, and the brand redesigned its logo to sit within a circle that echoes the tin’s shape.
- Ads often show the circular tin prominently, so the circle becomes both package and logo cue.
6. Beats by Dr. Dre
- The Beats “b” icon sits inside a red circle, and the shape doubles as a stylized headphone earcup seen from the side.
- You see this circle on headphone earcups, product packaging, and minimalist digital ads.
7. LG
- LG’s logo is a stylized human face formed within a circle, with the “L” and “G” integrated into the circular outline.
- It appears on TVs, appliances, and tech product labels, with the circle being central to the brand identity.
8. NASA “meatball” logo
- NASA’s classic “meatball” insignia is a circular blue field with stars, a red vector, and the NASA wordmark.
- It’s used on mission patches, promotional posters, educational materials, and merchandise as a distinct circle-based mark.
9. Olympic Rings (circle-based symbol)
- The Olympic logo is made of five interlocking circles, and while “circle” isn’t in the name, the circles are the entire identity.
- On medals, banners, uniforms, and TV graphics, those colored circles are the key branding and advertising element.
If you’d like, I can narrow this down to just consumer product packages (like Nivea tins, soft drink cans, snack boxes) or to only those that explicitly mention “circle” in the product or campaign name (for a more textbook-style answer).