Designing a Logo for the Whaly Waterproof Cover
When Branding Leaves the Computer Screen and Gets Stitched onto a Boat
Branding often begins on a computer screen.
A logo is sketched, adjusted, resized, recoloured, exported, saved in twelve different file formats, and then usually ends up on a website, a social media post, a YouTube thumbnail or perhaps a printed leaflet.
But sometimes branding has to do something rather more practical.
Sometimes it has to survive rain, river water, mud, ultraviolet light, folded fabric, trailer movement, winter weather and the occasional enthusiastic person dragging a boat cover across the ground because they are trying to get it on before the next shower arrives.
That is the challenge with designing a logo for the waterproof cover for Whaly Coyote, our Whaly electric boat.
This is not simply a graphic design project. It is a design, making, sewing, materials and durability project. In other words, it is exactly the sort of practical problem that Philip M Russell Ltd enjoys.
From Digital Logo to Real Object
The Whaly Coyote is used for filming, safety support, training and general boating work on the River Thames. It is a very practical boat, and the cover needs to be practical too.
However, practical does not have to mean dull.
A waterproof cover with a carefully designed embroidered logo immediately gives the boat a more professional identity. It says this boat is part of something larger: video production, sailing tuition, restoration projects, science communication and the wider work of Philip M Russell Ltd.
There is also something very satisfying about taking a logo from the screen and turning it into a physical object.
On the computer, the design can look perfect. The lines are sharp. The colours are clean. The edges are exact.
Then the embroidery machine gets involved.
Suddenly the question is not just, “Does this look good?”
The question becomes:
Can this actually be stitched?
Designing for Embroidery Is Different
A logo intended for embroidery has to be simpler than one designed purely for print or screen.
Fine lines may vanish. Tiny lettering may become unreadable. Complex colour gradients are not usually helpful. Small details that look wonderful on a monitor can turn into an untidy knot of thread once they are stitched into fabric.
So the first design decision is restraint.
For the Whaly Coyote cover, the logo needs to be bold, clear and recognisable from a distance. It should work when viewed across the boat park, from the pontoon or in the background of a video.
That means choosing simple shapes, strong outlines and lettering that is large enough to survive the embroidery process.
A good embroidered logo should not need an explanation. If someone glances at the cover, they should be able to read it and recognise it quickly.
Choosing the Right Design Elements
The Whaly itself gives us several possible design directions.
There is the boat’s name: Whaly Coyote.
There is the idea of an electric boat, quietly moving along the river and charged from solar power.
There is the role of the boat as a camera platform and safety support boat.
There is the connection with pmrsailing.uk and the wider story of learning to sail, filming on the Thames and supporting the restoration of classic boats such as Champagne.
The temptation is to include everything.
A boat. A camera. A river. A sun. A battery. A coyote. A lightning bolt. A sailing burgee. Possibly a small Thames A-Rater sailing past in the background.
This is where design discipline is needed.
A cover logo cannot become a family tree of every project we have ever done. It needs to be simple enough to embroider and strong enough to make an impact.
The best version may be something like:
WHALY COYOTE
Electric Camera Boat
with a simple outline or symbol that suggests the Whaly’s character.
Thread Colours: Attractive but Practical
Colour choice is another practical decision.
On a screen, any colour is possible. In embroidery, the design depends on the thread colours available, how they look against the cover material and how well they will stand up visually over time.
The cover material may be dark, which would make pale lettering stand out clearly. Alternatively, if the cover is lighter, darker thread may be needed.
High contrast matters more than subtlety.
For a boat cover, I would rather have a clear, readable logo than a beautifully subtle one that disappears at ten metres.
Possible thread choices might include:
- white or silver for clean lettering
- blue to connect with water and boating
- gold or yellow for a touch of warmth and visibility
- black or dark grey for outlines
- green if we want to hint at the electric, solar-powered side of the boat
The challenge is to avoid overcomplicating the design. Every additional colour adds time, increases the chance of alignment issues and may make the embroidery less robust.
Testing on Scrap Material
Before going anywhere near the actual waterproof cover, the sensible step is to test the design on scrap fabric.
This is the embroidery equivalent of making a prototype in the workshop or printing a first version on the 3D printer.
The test piece tells us what the computer screen cannot.
Does the lettering remain readable?
Are the lines too thin?
Does the thread pull the fabric?
Is the design too dense?
Does the backing material work?
Does the embroidery distort the cover fabric?
This is the stage where mistakes are welcome, because they are still cheap mistakes.
A test on scrap material might show that the lettering needs to be larger, the stitching density needs to be reduced or a fine detail needs to be removed altogether.
This is not failure. This is development.
In fact, it is the same process we use in laboratory R&D: design, make, test, modify and test again.
Positioning the Logo on the Cover
Once the logo works as embroidery, the next question is where to put it.
This sounds simple, but it matters.
The logo needs to be visible when the cover is on the boat. It should not end up hidden under a fold, pulled round a corner or obscured by straps.
It also needs to avoid areas of high stress.
A waterproof cover is not a flat poster. It bends, tightens, stretches and moves. Some parts of the cover will be pulled harder than others. Some parts may be folded repeatedly. Some areas may rub against fittings, ropes or the boat itself.
The embroidered logo should ideally sit on a relatively stable, visible panel.
Before stitching, it is worth placing the cover on the boat and marking possible logo positions with tape or chalk. Photographs can then be taken from different angles to see what works best.
This is a good example of why design should not be separated from the real object.
The boat decides whether the design works.
Waterproofing and Durability
Embroidery involves putting holes through fabric.
That is worth thinking about when the fabric is meant to be waterproof.
The stitching itself may be durable, but the embroidered area may need careful treatment to help maintain water resistance. Depending on the cover material and construction, this might involve using a suitable backing, seam sealant or additional reinforcement patch.
The aim is not just to make something attractive. The aim is to make something that still works as a boat cover.
A logo that looks wonderful but creates a leak is not a success.
This is where the project becomes a balance between appearance and function.
The cover has a job to do. The logo must not stop it doing that job.
Why This Project Fits Philip M Russell Ltd
This may seem like a small project, but it brings together many parts of what Philip M Russell Ltd does.
There is design work.
There is digital production.
There is practical making.
There is materials testing.
There is video and branding.
There is the sailing project.
There is the question of whether we can make more of our own equipment rather than simply buying everything ready-made.
That is one of the interesting things about running a small company with a laboratory, workshop, studio and boat projects all overlapping. A simple idea can cross several different areas.
A boat cover logo becomes a design project, a sewing project, a branding project and potentially a video story.
It is not just about putting a name on a cover.
It is about learning what is possible.
Turning the Process into a Video Story
This project also has good potential as a short behind-the-scenes video.
The story is easy to follow:
- Start with the Whaly Coyote and the plain waterproof cover.
- Show the logo design on the computer.
- Explain why embroidery needs a simple, bold design.
- Show thread colours being chosen.
- Film the test stitch on scrap material.
- Compare the first attempt with the revised version.
- Mark the logo position on the cover.
- Show the final embroidery.
- End with the cover fitted on the boat.
The key is to make the problem clear.
The viewer should understand that the project is not just “putting a logo on fabric”. It is about making design decisions that survive contact with the real world.
That makes it much more interesting.
Personal Reflection: Practical Design Is Always a Conversation with Reality
I have always liked projects where the computer is only the starting point.
A design may look finished on screen, but the real test comes when it has to work in wood, plastic, metal, fabric or on a boat beside the River Thames.
Reality has opinions.
Fabric pulls. Thread breaks. Waterproof material does not always behave beautifully. Covers fold in awkward places. Boats are curved. Weather is inconvenient. And what looks enormous on a laptop screen can look surprisingly small once it is on a full-sized boat cover.
That is why practical making is so valuable.
It teaches patience. It teaches iteration. It teaches that design is not just about imagination; it is also about materials, tools and use.
The Whaly Coyote cover logo is a small project, but it represents a bigger idea: making things that are useful, personal and connected to the work we actually do.
Conclusion: Branding You Can Touch
A logo on a website is useful.
A logo on a social media post is useful.
But a logo stitched onto a waterproof boat cover feels different.
It becomes part of the object. It belongs to the boat. It travels to the river, appears in videos, sits in the boat park and tells a small part of the story before anyone has even pressed record.
Designing the Whaly Coyote cover logo is about more than decoration.
It is about turning branding into something physical, practical and durable.
It is about learning how digital design behaves when translated into thread and fabric.
It is about making the boat look more professional while still respecting the fact that a waterproof cover must first and foremost protect the boat.
And, as with many of our projects, it begins with a simple question:
Could we make that ourselves?
The answer is usually:
Let’s design it, test it, and find out.


