Under 1KB each! Super Tiny Web Icons are minuscule SVG versions of your favourite logos. The average size is under 568 bytes!
The logos have a 512x512 viewbox, they will fit in a circle with radius 256. They will scale up and down to suit your needs.
Say thanks!
542 Bytes SVG | 5,897 Bytes PNG | 414 Bytes SVG | 4,743 Bytes PNG | 250 Bytes SVG | 4,478 Bytes PNG |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Google Maps (old) 713 Bytes |
Gmail (Old) 584 Bytes |
Google Drive (Old) 313 Bytes |
Google+ 397 Bytes |
Udemy 308 Bytes |
Chrome 378 Bytes |
Firefox 1022 Bytes |
Samsung Internet 346 Bytes |
Edge 964 Bytes |
Opera 469 Bytes |
Safari 708 Bytes |
Brave 1001 Bytes |
Chromium 369 Bytes |
iTunes 779 Bytes |
Google 466 Bytes |
Pocket Casts 292 Bytes |
Stitcher 387 Bytes |
TuneIn 608 Bytes |
acast 461 Bytes |
Overcast 789 Bytes |
PayPal 548 Bytes |
Bitcoin 529 Bytes |
Ethereum 412 Bytes |
Liberapay 565 Bytes |
Ko-Fi 421 Bytes |
Flattr 347 Bytes |
Patreon 249 Bytes |
Venmo 343 Bytes |
Square Cash 791 Bytes |
OpenCollective 474 Bytes |
GateHub 462 Bytes |
Steam 455 Bytes |
GOG.com 718 Bytes |
Ubisoft 529 Bytes |
Uplay 542 Bytes |
Electronic Arts 296 Bytes |
Minecraft 1023 Bytes |
itch.io 870 Bytes |
Logitech 371 Bytes |
Origin 656 Bytes |
Sublime Text 728 Bytes |
Visual Studio Code 923 Bytes |
Apache Netbeans 721 Bytes |
Bytes cost money. They cost money to store, transport, and process. Simplicity should be our goal in all endeavours.
These files were edited by hand in Inkscape, Illustrator, or a text editor, then were minified using Yann Armelin's SVG Path Editor, svgo, and svgcleaner. Further smallification may be possible. Try it!
- Each of these has an
xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"
in the<svg>
tag. This isn't strictly necessary - but some web browsers won't display them as an image without it. - Rounded corners can be dropped -
rx="80"
- the effect can be done in CSS if you want. - The background colour can also be excluded if you're including it elsewhere.
- Colours can be simplified.
#FF0000
becomesred
. - The precision of the paths is mostly 0 decimal places. A few logos have 1 or 2 dp to make them look more accurate. The precision can be reduced if necessary.
Think you can make them smaller? Tell me by raising an issue!
Want more icons? Tell me by raising an issue!
Think the icons look wrong? Compare them against the official logos. If they still look wrong, tell me by raising an issue!
Icons also available as Android Vector Drawables, so you can easily use them in Android apps.
They are converted using Android Studio and are not guaranteed to be under 1KB.
To convert in Android Studio, go to Tools ➡ Resource Manager ➡ Drawable ➡ + ➡ Import Drawables ➡ then select the SVGs.
Note Android Studio doesn't like rounded corners with a percentage length value. Before importing, run sed -i '/rx\=\"15\%\"/d' ./*.svg
to remove the corner or sed -i -e '/rx\=/s/\"15\%\"/\"77\"/' ./*.svg
to replace the percentage length value with a corresponding fixed length value.
See: https://issuetracker.google.com/issues/176694227
I'd love you to submit something 😸 The rules are simple, your icon must:
- be under 1024 bytes. That is, the maximum file size is 1023 bytes. No arguments.
- fit inside a circle with radius 256 pixels. Set
rx="50%"
to check. - represent a popular service's current logo.
At a minimum, your icon needs these components:
<svg
xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"
aria-label="..." role="img"
viewBox="0 0 512 512">
<rect
width="512" height="512"
rx="15%"
fill="#fff"/>
...
</svg>
The super tiny icons are accessible by default. Each icon has:
role="img"
, to expose the<svg>
elements as images in the browser's accessibility treearia-label="XYZ"
(where XYZ is the icon's brand name), to give the icon an accessible name
Note:
if using the <svg>
as the src
for an <img>
element, the alt
attribute should still be used on the <img>
element because the ARIA is not recognised in this context.
CSS-Tricks has also an article about accessible SVG icons.
This is the standard guideline. Use this to help with sizing your icons and they will look good no matter what border radius is chosen.
- Green is the safe zone, where the main body of the icon should be.
- Yellow is like a road shoulder, it is there if more space is needed. It should be used for protruding elements, like corners or ornaments.
- Red is off limits. It should not be touched by the icons. Red is also how a circular icon would look.
npm install --save super-tiny-icons
The old-school way:
<img src="./node_modules/super-tiny-icons/images/svg/github.svg" />
The modern way, the React (JSX) example:
import logo from "super-tiny-icons/images/svg/github.svg";
<img src={logo} />;
The demo repository bootstrapped with create-react-app
: create-react-app-super-tiny-icons
This project exists thanks to all the people who contribute. [Contribute].
Become a financial contributor and help us sustain our community. [Contribute]
Support this project with your organization. Your logo will show up here with a link to your website. [Contribute]
The majority of these vector logos are based on someone else's work.
- Social Media Icons by Aha-Soft - CC-BY
- Phone Icon - Free
- Lock Icon - MIT
- Wire Logo - Public Domain
- Signal Logo - GPLv3
- RSS Icon - MPL 1.1
- PDF Icon - Free
- Google+ - Public Domain
- Mastodon - AGPLv3
- GitLab
- HTML5 Shield - CC-BY
- npm Logo - CC-BY
- Docker Logo - Apache
- Steam
- Symantec
- Yubico - BSD
- Keybase - BSD
- eBay
- Kickstarter
- Bitcoin - CC0
- Bluetooth
- Blogger
- Medium
- Ghost
- Tumblr
- Intel
- Badoo
- YouTube
- Google Play
- Gmail
- Samsung Internet
- Plex - GPLv2
- NHS
- Threema.
- CoreUI - CC-BY
- NixOS - CC-BY
From SVGporn - CC0
IBM, Yammer, Android, Authy, Cloudflare, CodePen, DigitalOcean, Discord, Airbnb, WiFi, Delicious, Open Source, Patreon, Tim Cuthbertson
Where possible, they retain their original licenses. Some logos may be subject to copyright and trademark laws, but these files are small enough to memorise.