Olympic National Park News Release
Olympic National Park is reaching out to local businesses and organizations
by providing a simple, inexpensive licensing process for using the official
Elwha River Restoration logo and tagline to develop promotional products
and websites.
Olympic National Park Announces Logo Use Guidelines:
Local Businesses and Organizations Invited to Develop Elwha Products
Olympic National Park is reaching out to local businesses and organizations
by providing a simple, inexpensive licensing process for using the official
Elwha River Restoration logo and tagline to develop promotional products
and websites.
“People are talking about Elwha River Restoration—around our area and
around the country,” said park superintendent Karen Gustin. “We’re
providing this unique opportunity as another way for the Port Angeles and
Olympic Peninsula communities to become involved with this landmark project
as we approach the start of dam removal in September.”
The two-page license agreement and a style guide can be viewed and
downloaded on the park’s website here:
www.nps.gov/olym/naturescience/elwha-tagline-and-logo.htm.
The logo was designed by Port Angeles-based Laurel Black Design. The
“Natural Wonders Never Cease” tagline was developed by New Path Marketing
of Sammamish, Washington. Both logo and tagline were first used by the park
in November 2010.
“This is a great way for businesses, schools, youth groups or non-profit
organizations to really be creative and begin to develop their own
signature Elwha River Restoration products,” Gustin added.
Elwha River Restoration, an environmental and cultural restoration project
which includes the nation’s largest dam removal, will free the Elwha River
after nearly a century. Removing the 108-foot Elwha Dam and the 210-foot
Glines Canyon Dam will allow anadromous fish to access more than 70 miles
of protected habitat and help restore the river’s salmon populations from
3,000 to more than 300,000.
For more information on Elwha River Restoration, please visit the Olympic
National Park’s website at www.nps.gov/olymor share information and
interact with “Elwha River Restoration” on Facebook.