The mark
Three stacked lanes, leaning forward. The symbol carries the name literally: layers that stack, a path that moves. It is the one element that appears on everything, so it earns the most rules.
The symbol
One mark, depth by tone
Three interlocking lanes in an isometric stack: a deep card at the back, a cobalt lane through the middle, a royal lane in front. The depth is built into the geometry, never added with an outline or a drop shadow. Two blues plus their overlap read as three.
duotone / light- Shapes
- Three lanes
- Construction
- Isometric stack
- Aspect
0.75 : 1- Front tone
#4856F8Royal- Middle tone
#2233F0Cobalt- Back tone
#1421B2Deep
Wordmark & lockup
The wordmark never changes
“Stacklane” is set in Plus Jakarta Sans, weight 600, at -0.04em tracking. It is the single font deviation in the whole system and it is reserved for this word only. Pair it with the mark for the horizontal lockup; the optical gap and the type size track the mark height so the lockup scales as one unit.
primaryPlus Jakarta Sans 600Logo lab
Try every variant
Pick a ground and a configuration; the mark flips to the right tone on its own. Use the symbol when the name already sits nearby, the lockupwhen it doesn’t. Horizontal is primary; stacked is for square and centred spaces. The colour mark never goes on a dark ground, nor the white mark on a light one, and the lab won’t let you.
Reference
The full set
Every configuration on every ground, plus the one-colour builds. This is the matrix to export from.
Symbol
Horizontal lockup
Stacked lockup
One colour
Spacing & scale
Give it room, keep it legible
Clear space is the width of the front card on every side. Keep that margin free of type, edges, and other marks. The mark holds down to 16px; the lockup down to 96px wide. Below that, use the mark alone.
= front-card widthmark, on lightMisuse
What breaks the mark
The mark is fixed geometry in fixed tones. Everything below pulls it out of the system. If you are tempted to do any of these, use a supplied variant instead.