10 Business Letterhead Design Tips (With Killer Brand Identity Examples) | Envato Tuts+ (2024)

Emails may be the standard means of written communication these days, but there are still occasions when only a printed letter will do. They feel particularly relevant now—in our digital-saturated age a delivered letter speaks volumes about the extra effort you’re willing to put in to impress new clients.

10 Business Letterhead Design Tips (With Killer Brand Identity Examples) | Envato Tuts+ (1)10 Business Letterhead Design Tips (With Killer Brand Identity Examples) | Envato Tuts+ (2)10 Business Letterhead Design Tips (With Killer Brand Identity Examples) | Envato Tuts+ (3)

Letterheads come in a range of styles and layouts, and are the cornerstone of a branded stationery set. Whether you’re looking to design something more formal, edgy or unusual, you’ll find these ten tips for designing letterheads essential reading before you begin.

If you're looking for a shortcut, you can download ready-made letterhead templates that are created by professional designers and follow best practices. Here's a roundup of the best ones:

  • 25 Professional Modern Letterhead TemplatesMelody Nieves12 Sep 2019

When you’re ready to design your own business letterhead, this tutorial shows you how you can create a complete branded stationery kitin Adobe InDesign.

We feature a number of greatbrand identity examples with creative stationery throughout this tutorial.So you can grab the right one for your business needs.You can also browse a huge range of professionalstationery templates on Envato Market to find something you can customize in a flash!

10 Business Letterhead Design Tips (With Killer Brand Identity Examples) | Envato Tuts+ (10)10 Business Letterhead Design Tips (With Killer Brand Identity Examples) | Envato Tuts+ (11)10 Business Letterhead Design Tips (With Killer Brand Identity Examples) | Envato Tuts+ (12)

1. Where to Start? Go for Simple Shapes...

If you find yourself looking at a blank piece of paper and willing it to transform into a showstopping letterhead design, you might want to consider going back to basics first.

A letterhead isn’t a show-stealer—whereas you might design your website or business card to give it the real wow factor, a letterhead can be trickier to design as it’s not intended to be as showy. After all, the focus of the letter should be the text content, whether that’s a cover letter to a new employer or an introduction letter to a new client. The letterhead’s design serves to frame the text content in a professional way, without being too distracting.

However, that’s not to say that you can’t be creative with your business letterhead designs. Rather, try to aim for a minimal design that’s stylish yet subtle.

Simple, geometric shapes are great for adding a splash of color and style to your letterhead. If you already have a logo, why not try lifting a shape from the logo design to repeat in a pattern across a corner? Or why not take a simple shape like a triangle or diamond and repeat across the bottom of your letterhead, varying the size and applying your brand colors, like in this geometric letterhead template?

10 Business Letterhead Design Tips (With Killer Brand Identity Examples) | Envato Tuts+ (13)10 Business Letterhead Design Tips (With Killer Brand Identity Examples) | Envato Tuts+ (14)10 Business Letterhead Design Tips (With Killer Brand Identity Examples) | Envato Tuts+ (15)

If you’re short on time, or need to produce something that’s a little more on the corporate side, geometric shapes are instant crowd-pleasers.

This tutorial will take you through step-by-step on how to create a geometric letterhead in Adobe InDesign:

  • Create a Branded Resumé, Letterhead and Business Card in Adobe InDesignGrace Fussell30 Jul 2015

2. No Color Printer? No Problem!

OK, let’s think practically for a moment. It’s all very well designing a letterhead in an array of brilliant colors and finishes, but if you’re designing these for a working office you might find that in-office printers are going to diminish the quality of your designs.

So, what’s the solution if the company you’re designing for only have practical access to non-color printing?

There’s no need to shudder—you can easily create a letterhead design that will work equally well for color and non-color printing. Bright colors can appear dull and greyed out when printed on non-color printers, so aim for a strong monochrome design instead.

Don’t be tempted to apply huge chunks of black across your business letterhead—if the printer’s a bit dodgy these can appear lined or pixelated. Go for bold linear pattern instead. This stylish monochrome template shows how you can achieve a high-end, Art Deco-inspired style by using repetitive black lines. It’s deceptively simple, but looks fantastic, and would work particularly well for retail brands or hotel businesses.

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3. Looking for Something More ‘Start-up’?

This might not be the best fit for a legal firm or an accountancy practice, but ultra-colorful designs can look amazing when matched with the right sort of company.

Technology and computing firms, start-ups and creative agencies can appear more forward-thinking and futuristic with a bold color choice. Even utilities companies can appear more optimistic and customer-friendly with a rainbow of brights at the top of bills and invoices.

Organic, curvy graphics are a perfect match for bright color. Also, a 3D style, with highlights, shadows and gradients, can look really impressive and help you stand out in a sea of flat design styles.

If you want to use a rainbow spectrum of color, avoid looking like you’ve gone crazy with paint by limiting it to just three or four related colors. This brand identity example with acolorful letterhead templateshows how to achieve the vibrant look without compromising on style—a blend of curvy shapes is restricted to a palette of yellow, orange, pink and blue to keep it from looking too busy.

10 Business Letterhead Design Tips (With Killer Brand Identity Examples) | Envato Tuts+ (25)10 Business Letterhead Design Tips (With Killer Brand Identity Examples) | Envato Tuts+ (26)10 Business Letterhead Design Tips (With Killer Brand Identity Examples) | Envato Tuts+ (27)

4. Apply a Strong Brand Design

Before you really get started with designing your letterhead, you need to have some basic but essential elements in place. If you have a strong brand design already to hand, you’ve got very little work to do—a visually striking logo and bold brand colors will be more than enough to start working with.

If you don’t have a logo and color palette, consider creating these for your letterhead. If you’re a freelancer and getting started with creating your own stationery, a logo, however simple, with your name and/or business name, is worth spending a little time on creating.

A quick and simple way to create your own personal logo is to write your own name, or set it in a handwritten font. This gives an instant personal edge to your stationery. This tutorial shows you how to use this technique to create a personal brand that you can use on resumes, letterheads and business cards:

  • How to Design a CreativeResumeGrace Fussell24 Dec 2015

Once you have your logo you can addpersonality and professionalism by teaming it with a great color combination. Seek out pairs of colors that complement each other and also give off the right signals about your industry and position in the market. For example, yellow and black/slate grey is an ultra-stylish combination with a masculine edge.

Other tried-and-tested color combinations to use are blue withwhite (perfect for tech firms), red withblack (a strong, go-gettingcombination for grabbing attention), and neon or pastel withblack (a hip combination that is jarring in just the right way). See our take on a retro-feelingred/white combination in action with our step-by-step guide to creating a brand identity from scratch:

  • Team Awesome: From Hand-Lettered Logotype to Vector in Adobe IllustratorRoberlan Borges29 May 2015

5. Go Retro with the Right Typography

What could be more old-school (in a good way) than receiving a typewritten letter in the post? Play up the vintage appeal of opening a printed letter by using typefaces, layout styles and colors that reference times gone by.

I’m not suggesting you go all-out antique (although if you’re running a vintage store or a hipster coffee shop, then why not?), but a subtle reference to the golden age of secretarial letters, the 1950s and 1960s, will add a retro, stylish edge to your letterheads.

Typography is key to achieving this look. Typewriter fonts come in many forms, some more novel than stylish, so look for typefaces that have a geometric style, without aged effects to keep it looking slick. Manson is great for giving headers and logos a look that would be worthy of the International Style, while Source Code Pro is a legible, simple take on the typewriter style.

Don’t let the retro style drift into novelty territory by keeping your business letterhead design minimal.

This rusty peach looks great contrasted with a strong black. Positioning color imperfectly behind the header also adds to the 60s letterpress-style look.

6. Use a Watermark

With border or corner designs on your letterhead, it sometimes feels like there still isn’t enough room for the text. If you have a tendancy to write long letters, or would rather just not reduce further the amount of space available on the page, a watermark is a fantastic solution for adding color and graphics without sacrificing space.

It’s also a great solution for the dodgy office printing situation (see item 2, above) where you might not even be able to print to the trim edge of the page. Position a watermark in the dead center of the page and there’s no chance of elements of your design being chopped off by the printer.

Watermarks may be one of the oldest stationery tricks in the book but there’s an art to getting them right. Too dark and they can obscure text, too pale and they can lack impact.

What I recommend is that you set the transparency or tint of your watermark to much paler than you would first expect. A 5-10% color tint will look just right, even if it appears very pale on screen.

Adding a paper texture background behind the watermark and setting the transparency mode of the graphic to multiply will also pull through some nice texture and add interest and a tactile quality to your letterhead, whatever paper you print on.

Lifting graphic elements from a logo is the perfect starting point for a watermark design. This branded letterhead template lifts the chain-link shape of the company’s logo, and pales the color to a pleasing soft pink.

10 Business Letterhead Design Tips (With Killer Brand Identity Examples) | Envato Tuts+ (40)10 Business Letterhead Design Tips (With Killer Brand Identity Examples) | Envato Tuts+ (41)10 Business Letterhead Design Tips (With Killer Brand Identity Examples) | Envato Tuts+ (42)

7. Know When to Keep it Simple

Not every company will suit a look-at-me letterhead; sometimes the simplest designs will be a more suitable choice for corporate businesses.

Don’t get carried away if you’re tasked with creating a letterhead for a business. You may well be able to create stunning graphics and artful typography, but will that sort of look actually suit the business you are designing for?

If the company is likely to share written correspondence with legal or financial firms, it may not be appropriate to use a letterhead adorned with metallics, bright colors or quirky illustrations. It takes a brave designer to do something really creative, but an even braver one to create something elegant and minimal instead.

10 Business Letterhead Design Tips (With Killer Brand Identity Examples) | Envato Tuts+ (43)10 Business Letterhead Design Tips (With Killer Brand Identity Examples) | Envato Tuts+ (44)10 Business Letterhead Design Tips (With Killer Brand Identity Examples) | Envato Tuts+ (45)

In your own designs, limit yourself to just a few key elements for your clean design—one color, one logo, and a simple border or trim. Position the text content of the letter off-center to increase the amount of white space on the page, and visually declutter the layout.

8. Fun Company? Make a Fun Letterhead!

If you’re lucky enough to be given a letterhead design brief by somebody really fun (whether that’s a creative agency, or yourself!), you need to ignore all the advice I just shared in item 7, above.

If you’re designing for a creative, young company, like an agency or retailer, they might use written correspondence to share information about promotions and events with customers. For this, they’re going to want to have a letterhead that really catches the eye.

This is the perfect opportunity for you to flex your creative muscles and design a letterhead that balances the optimism of the brand with an on-trend design.

Flat graphics are a great way of bringing color into a design while keeping the layout looking fresh and contemporary. This playfulbrand identity example with afun letterhead template uses repetitive, curvy elements with a retro-inspired color palette and a flat design style.

10 Business Letterhead Design Tips (With Killer Brand Identity Examples) | Envato Tuts+ (46)10 Business Letterhead Design Tips (With Killer Brand Identity Examples) | Envato Tuts+ (47)10 Business Letterhead Design Tips (With Killer Brand Identity Examples) | Envato Tuts+ (48)

Just allowing the graphics to peek out from the corners of the letterhead keeps the layout fun but conservative on space. This sort of design would suit a children’s retail company or a youthful food brand down to the ground. It’s also super-simple to achieve, involving repeated shapes. It’s the flat style and trendy color palette that keeps the design looking young and exciting.

Looking for something even more fun? This tutorial shows you how to create a complete stationery set for Professor X's School for Gifted Youngsters:

  • How to Create a Stationery Set for Xavier’s School for Gifted YoungstersGrace Fussell28 Apr 2016

9. Use Borders with (Extreme!) Caution

It all starts out innocently enough—wouldn’t a nice border frame my letterhead just so? True, borders can add a beautiful finishing touch to a layout, but their impact can be severely diminished by the restraints of in-house printing.

Unless you’re planning on professionally printing your letterheads and having them carefully trimmed, avoid a trim-edge border at all costs. In-house printing can result in a wobbly, off-centered border or, even worse, a partial or lopped-off border that makes the letter look sloppy.

If you’d still like to take advantage of the framing qualities of a border, place your border on the margin (not the trim) edge, allowing it to frame just the text sitting within. Keep the border thin and minimal to avoid restricting your letter and making text appear constrained.

10. Repeat Elements Across a Stationery Set

If you’re making the effort to create a branded letterhead for your own personal business or that of a client (and believe me, it’s worth the effort!), you really should consider extending your design across a complete stationery set.

This may sound like a lot of work, but it’s actually relatively simple to do once you’ve pinned down a brand ‘look’ for your letterhead. As we looked at earlier, geometric shapes are really easy to design, look incredibly effective and are versatile enough to repeat across other items, like envelopes and business cards.

Once you have the basic stylistic elements of your letterhead in place, such as graphics, pattern, color and a logo, repeat these elements across other stationery designs. Switching up the color is a great way to add interest while maintaining a consistent look; or why not take inspiration from this branded stationery set, and subtly tweak the scale and position of shapes to create a unified design?

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Promoting consistency across all of your stationery items really is an extra-special touch that will make your ‘brand’ appear incredibly professional and pulled together.

Go Forth and Create an Amazing Letterhead

While letterheads might not be as high on your business to-do list as designing a logo or website, it will become one of the hardest-working items in your branded arsenal. Written letters tend to mark some of the most defining moments in your business, whether that’s introducing yourself to that much sought-after client or establishing contact with a partner business or networking contact.

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When these seminal moments come along, you’ll be glad that you spent the time creating and refining a beautiful, professional letterhead that you can use time and again.

However, if you don’t have the time to create a letterhead from scratch, that’s no problem! You can customize a ready-made template from the great selection of stationery templates over on Envato Market. Simple tweaks like adjusting color or typeface can personalize a template and make it unique to your brand.

Do you have any tips for creating branded stationery or brand identitiesyou’d like to share? We’d love to hear them! Share your accounts of successes (and mistakes!) in the comments below.

10 Business Letterhead Design Tips (With Killer Brand Identity Examples) | Envato Tuts+ (2024)

FAQs

How do you write a business letterhead? ›

Here are some things to consider when designing your letterhead: The basics: Who you are, where you are, and how to get in touch with you–that is, the same stuff you'd put on a business card: company name, logo, physical address, email, phone, fax, and web address, and perhaps a tagline.

What is a letterhead in branding? ›

What is a letterhead? A business letterhead is a header at the top of a company letter. The letterhead usually includes a business's logo, name, address, and contact information such as phone or fax number, email address, and company website URL.

What is the best color combination for a letterhead? ›

Black and white, navy and blue cream — they're classic color combinations that are timeless and professional, and they work on any style of letterhead.

What is the difference between a logo and a letterhead? ›

While a letterhead may incorporate a logo, the main distinction is that a letterhead includes essential company details, while a logo is a standalone graphic element that symbolizes your brand identity.

Can I use my logo as letterhead? ›

No, a letterhead typically does not have to have a logo. However, if your business has a logo, it can be included on the letterhead in a variety of ways, such as print or electronic placement. Additionally, if your company uses a specific typeface or design for its letterhead, it may also be included in that design.

When not to use letterhead? ›

Correspondence involving personal matters such as a dispute, complaint, or similar issue should not be on company letterhead or from a work email address.

What side should a logo be on a letterhead? ›

Hence, it's necessary to clearly position the logos at the top left-hand corner of the letterhead because that's the most important area that grabs the audience's attention. Additionally, to create more appeal the surrounding white space of the logo should be highlighted elegantly.

What format should a letterhead be in? ›

Most business letterheads contain no more than two fonts, with the larger font for the company name appearing in 15-point size and the next line containing contact information in 10-point size. Colors on the letterhead should be used sparingly to avoid competition for the reader's attention.

What color attracts the human eye most? ›

Colors that Grab Attention

As a bold color that stands out, it's easily noticeable, even from a distance. In addition, red has been shown to increase the heart rate and stimulate the brain, making it a powerful aid in attracting attention. Blue is another notable color for catching the eye.

What three colors go well together? ›

Sets of 3 colors that go great together
  • Yellow, red, and blue.
  • Green, orange, and purple.
  • Teal, magenta, and gold.

How do I make a professional quality letterhead in Word? ›

Step-by-step instructions on how to create a letterhead in Microsoft Word
  1. Open Microsoft Word and go to the “Insert” tab.
  2. Choose “Header” from the drop-down menu and pick a template or make your own.
  3. Add your logo and contact info.
  4. Adjust the font style, size, and color to match your brand.

Does Word have a letterhead template? ›

Select a letterhead template

If you don't want to create letterheads from scratch and prefer templates, type letterheads in the search bar on the top right of Word's welcome screen instead. Word has many letterhead templates categorized by themes like corporate, creative, minimalist, and modern.

How to make a company letterhead in Google Docs? ›

To do this, go to File and then Page Setup. Change the page layout to Letter or 8.5 x 11 inches (the most common size for letterheads). To add a logo, click on Insert and then Image to upload your logo (use PNG or JPG for best results). Step 3: Click on Insert and then Shapes to design your letterhead.

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