In 1971, a graphic design student named Carolyn Davidson was paid $35 to create a logo for a startup shoe company. The result was the Swoosh. Phil Knight reportedly said he didn’t love it but it would do. Fifty years later, the Swoosh is one of the most recognized trademarks on the planet.
The Design and Its Origins
Davidson was studying at Portland State University when Knight asked her to create something conveying motion. She drew on imagery of Nike, the Greek goddess of victory, and submitted several concepts. The Swoosh — a single fluid curve suggesting speed — was selected. Knight was reportedly lukewarm. Davidson was paid her $35. Years later, Knight gave her Nike stock as a gesture of recognition.
Trademark Registration
The Swoosh is registered as a US trademark, with Nike maintaining registrations in virtually every major commercial market worldwide.
📋 US Trademark Registration No.: 1,277,066 (USPTO TSDR)
What’s protected is not a generic checkmark. The specific angle, the curve’s proportions, the tapering width — these together constitute the Swoosh as a distinctive mark. Nike’s registrations are precise enough to distinguish the mark from similar curves while broad enough to catch obvious imitations.
The Famous Mark Doctrine
Under US and EU trademark law, famous marks receive a higher tier of protection. Ordinary trademarks are protected only against confusion in related product categories. Famous marks can claim protection even against use in entirely unrelated industries — guarding against dilution of the mark’s distinctiveness. The Swoosh qualifies as a famous mark. Even a food company using a similar curve could face action from Nike, regardless of whether consumers would associate the two.
Nike’s Enforcement Strategy
Nike is well known for aggressive trademark enforcement. Brands using visually similar curved check marks have received cease-and-desist letters regardless of whether they compete directly with Nike. This is partly defensive: a famous mark that fails to police its boundaries risks genericization — the process by which a distinctive mark loses protection through common use.
What Built
Brand valuation firms consistently rank Nike among the most valuable brands globally. The Swoosh is the concentrated symbol of that value. What the Swoosh illustrates is that trademark value is not inherent in design — it is accumulated through decades of consistent use, strategic protection, and investment in consumer recognition. The design is 50 years old. The value it represents was built one product, one campaign, one enforcement action at a time.
Sources
- USPTO TSDR: Nike Swoosh trademark registration
- Japan Patent Office: Overview of the Trademark System
This article is for informational and entertainment purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.

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