Okay, so I’ve been messing around with vector graphics lately, trying to find some good free resources. You know how it is, sometimes you just need a simple icon or illustration and you don’t want to spend hours creating it yourself or shelling out cash for stock images. That’s where “Leo SVG Free” came in.
I started by, obviously, searching for something about “free SVG resources”. I stumbled upon a few options, and I needed resources for my personal blog logo, so I clicked a few websites and tried to find some decent ones. I think I spent about 2 hours to find and filter those resources because, you know, time is money!
I downloaded a bunch of SVGs from those sites – you know, just grabbing anything that looked remotely useful. I didn’t have a super specific design in mind, more like gathering ingredients before I started cooking, you might say. I got like, maybe 50 different icons, illustrations, and patterns. A real mixed bag!

Then I opened up my trusty vector graphics editor. It’s the one I always use – nothing fancy, but it gets the job done. I started importing the SVGs one by one, just to get a feel for what I had to work with.
Browsing through all those files, I started to see some patterns. Some were definitely better than others. Some were overly complicated, some were just plain ugly, and some were perfect. I started deleting the ones I knew I wouldn’t use, just to declutter things a bit.
Picking and Choosing
After the initial purge, I was left with maybe 15 or 20 SVGs. I started playing around with them, combining different elements, changing colors, resizing things. It was like a digital collage. I moved a circle from one file, added a star from another, tweaked the colors to match my blog’s theme, and so on.
- Imported several SVGs.
- Deleted the unwanted ones.
- Combined elements from different files.
- Resized and recolored to fit my needs.
The cool thing about SVGs is that they’re scalable, right? So I could resize things without losing any quality. That was super important because I wanted the logo to look good both on my blog header and as a tiny favicon.
After a couple of hours of tinkering, I finally had something I liked! It wasn’t a masterpiece, but it was mine, and it was made entirely from free resources. I exported the final design as an SVG, and then I also saved a PNG version for places that don’t support SVGs.
So, yeah, that’s how I used “Leo SVG Free” (well, the concept of it, anyway) to create a logo for my blog. It was a fun little project, and it saved me some time and money. Always a win in my book!