A karate dojo logo has to work at three different sizes on the same day: across a full back, on a left chest, and shrunk to hat-embroidery scale. The dojo logos that hold up at all three are the ones built from simple shapes and one or two colors. Here are five logo directions that actually translate to printed apparel, plus the free tools and templates to build the logo if you do not have a designer on staff.
Most karate logos are designed for a website header and then forced onto a shirt. The ones that print well are the opposite: designed to live on fabric first.
1. Crest in a circle frame
The dojo crest inside a clean circle outline, with the dojo name arched above and the founding year below. Reads as official. Works as both chest and back print. The default starting point for most karate logos.
2. Kanji wordmark
Just the dojo style or name in clean kanji. Bold strokes. No background. Works in any color combination. Easiest mark to embroider at hat scale.
3. Belt-rank icon
A tied belt rendered as a simple two-shape illustration. Each belt color gets its own version. Lets you build belt-promotion apparel where members earn the next color at each test.
4. Single-element shape
A torii gate, a karate fist, a stylized kick silhouette, or a wave (for coastal dojos). One bold shape. Works as a standalone or paired with a wordmark underneath.
5. Dojo monogram
The dojo initials interlocked into a single mark. Reads like a sports team crest. Works especially well for traditional Japanese karate styles that want a Western branding feel.
If your dojo does not have a designer, there are practical free paths to a usable mark:
The file format matters more than most dojo owners realize. A great logo concept saved as a low-resolution JPEG prints fuzzy. Use these formats:
If your only logo file is small or low-resolution, ask a designer to vectorize it before you order. A vector redraw costs $30 to $100 one time and pays for itself across every shirt you ever print.
For a deeper look at design ideas that go beyond the logo itself, see the karate shirt designs guide.
Karate logos are typically one or two colors. More than that and the design gets expensive to embroider and starts to look corporate.
Avoid gradients, drop shadows, and 3D effects. They look good on a website but print muddy on fabric. Keep the logo flat and bold.
Once the logo is ready, the apparel side is fast. Bear Grips Pro Shops carries 63 products that work for karate dojos: tees, tanks, hoodies, crewnecks, joggers, and hats. The same logo file works across the entire catalog.
Placement defaults that work for most karate dojos:
See the embroidered martial arts hats guide for hat-specific design tips, and the karate hoodies guide for hoodie pairing.
Upload your dojo logo and preview it on every shirt color before you order. No minimums. No setup fees.
Start FreeMost free logo generators produce a usable concept but require cleanup before printing. Export the logo as a vector if possible, then preview it at print size on a mockup using the Pro Shops free design tools.
The kanji wordmark is the easiest. Just the dojo style name in clean kanji at high contrast. No icon, no frame, no accent shapes. Works at every scale and reads as serious traditional karate.
Yes. Many dojos build a logo set: the same mark in white, yellow, green, brown, and black versions. Members get a new shirt at each belt promotion. Adds a revenue line and a milestone-celebration tradition.
Left chest at about 4 inches wide is the standard placement for everyday tees. Full back at 10 to 12 inches wide for back-print tees and hoodies. Hat embroidery at about 2.5 inches wide.