Scottish Television/STV

1st Logo (1957-1960)
Logo: Against a black background, we see the text:

Times New Roman

in a serif, jumbled-up font.

Technique: None.

Music/Sounds: None.

Availability: Extinct, just like lots of old logos from the UK. Additionally, several copies of early STV programs were destroyed in a studio fire in November 3, 1969.

2nd Logo (1960-1965)
Logo: Against a black background, we see four white squares, each of which are split by two white lines arranged in a cross shape. Inside the squares are (clockwise, starting in the top-left): an "Times New Roman", the lion rampant, a "Times New Roman", and a "Times New Roman", all of which are black. The letters are written in a wide serif font. "Times New Roman" is written below in the same font as the letters.

Variant: Sometimes, there would be no text below at all.

Technique: None.

Music/Sounds: An eight-note horn and drum fanfare, followed by the announcer saying, "This is Scotland".

Availability: Extinct.

3rd Logo (1965-1969)
Logo: For a split second, we see a white background, which is wiped away horizontally on both sides, revealing a white box opening up on a black background. The words "SCOTTISH" and "TELEVISION" (also in white) drop in from the top and bottom sides of the screen, respectively. Then, a white Lion Rampant (the symbol found on the flag used by the King of Scots) spins in counterclockwise

Variants:
 * In later years, due to complaints from the Lord Lyon King of Arms, the man in charge of protecting Scotland’s heraldry, the logo was re-filmed with the lion simply zooming in instead. This version also appears to have a slightly smaller box and text.

Technique: The text moving into their usual positions and the lion spinning in. Lots of choppy animation.

Music/Sounds: A rearrangement of the last logo theme played on the flute, followed by additions of a drum roll and a cymbal crash as the lion spins in. Composed by Geraldo, arranged by Ray Terry.

Availability: Extinct.
 * Though the news programme Scotland Today did show a brief portion of the zooming variant as part of a montage back in 2007 commemorating STV's 50th anniversary.
 * Andrew Wiseman's TV Room on 625.uk.com has a Flash remake of both the spinning and the zooming variants, so it's worth a look for nostalgia's sake.

4th Logo (1969-1985)
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Logo: Against a black background, we see the letters "stv", in a blocky font, zooming in. At the same time, an outline of a second set of the same letters zoom out. As the letters merge, the logo fades to blue.

Variants:
 * For areas that hadn't yet switched to colour, the logo is entirely in black-and-white, with the background fading to gray.
 * The blue color became slightly brighter in 1974.
 * In 1977, an additional version was added were we see 6 blue rectangles and 4 purple rectangles moving in from all sides of the screen. They briefly form a tartan pattern before colliding to form 9 light blue squares and rectangles. When then disappear fully, the lines retract to form a light blue STV logo. "SCOTTISH TELEVISION" then slide from within each other and rest when fully separated. This was dropped by 1980.
 * There was a still version with the STV logo inside the tartan pattern with the blue rectangles solid and surrounded by 4 light blue squares.
 * In the 1980s, there was a rotating version.

Technique: The zooming letters and the fade to blue/grey. The blocks forming the logo for the tartan variant.

Music/Sounds: A French horn fanfare or none.

Availability: Extinct for the original and animated version of the additional version which was so far only seen before Scotland Today.
 * The production variant was seen on a few shows and maybe seen on VHS of those shows.
 * Has a Flash remake of both versions on 625.uk.com.

5th Logo (August 31, 1985-December 1988)
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Logo: Against a black background, we see six gray cubes, one long rectangular column, one teal sphere, and a magenta cone shape zoom-out to the left and arrange themselves onto a sheet of metal, forming an abstract thistle shape. "SCOTTISH TELEVISION", in white, fades-in below.

Variants:
 * For STV's 30th anniversary in 1987, after the usual thistle animation, the metal sheet is quickly replaced by a black background, and the thistle is surrounded by a small purple/blue grid. "1957" and "1987" (in white) fade in at the top, then "30 YEARS OF SCOTTISH" (in blue) fade in below.
 * A special Christmas variant was used in which we see a shot of snow, and a snow-sculpted thistle fades onto it. "CHRISTMAS on Scottish" wipes in above and below the thistle in a dark blue script font.
 * During the summer of 1988, there was a special ident identical to the Christmas ident, but with a shot of a desert before manning down to the thistle made of sand.
 * During 1988, there were a number of idents where the thistle is on different colour backgroud.

Technique: Top-notch CGI for its time, done by Lambie-Nairn. The Christmas and Desert variants are mostly live-action.

Music/Sounds: A dramatic synth bass line with a mellow nine-note woodwind fanfare with an autoharp-like flourish.

Music/Sounds Variants:
 * The Christmas variant uses a soft chime tune, and the desert variant uses a tune with bongos, flutes, and guitars.
 * Sometimes, the end theme of the programme plays over the logo.

Availability: Saved on shows from the era.
 * The animated version was seen on some prints of Taggart.

6th Logo (January 1, 1989-December 31, 1992)
Logo: Against a dark cloudy sky with a shady purplish floor, three plastic discs called "tiddlywinks", one red, one, and one blue, roll forward and the camera follows them. They all fall down, one-by-one, in the appropriate order, and the camera showing that they are forming the "head" of the thistle as seen before. As the tiddlywinks fall, they all turn the thistle into their appropriate colors. The camera slightly turns upward to view the final product.

Variants:
 * In early 1990, an additional variant is introduced in which the blue thistle is shown, before the camera panned upward as a series of tiddlywinks come from the top and bottom of the screen to form the words "Impact" in a tall serif font. An abridged version of the music was used here.
 * From January 4th up until August 30th, 1991, there were numerous variants in which we see an aerial of Scotland including the Forth bridge, which fades to the thistle logo against a black background.
 * During 1992, there were a variant that takes place on a marble-like background. The thistle, appearing to be made out of glass, flips out from the right of the screen, and the screen starts to form "frost".

Technique: The cloudy sky and the tiddlywinks.

Music/Sounds: A synthesized tune with a series of chimes that are timed to the falling tiddlywinks.

Music/Sounds Variants:
 * A traditional Scottish-like tune plays for the "bridge" variant.
 * The "frost" variant uses a cheery harp-like tune.
 * The ending variant uses a dreamy, four note jingle.

Availability:
 * The production variant appeared on several shows, such as Taggart.
 * The animated end variant is used on season one episodes of Fun House.
 * The version with the 1989 ITV logo and copyright can be found on season two episodes of the UK version of Wheel of Fortune.

7th Logo (September 1-December 1989)
See ITV for description.

8th Logo (January 1, 1993-October 5, 1996)
Logo: Against a stylized purple background, the "head" from the thistle, in silver, zooms out and slowly flips around, and as this happens, the other parts of the thistle unfold from right to left, and the words "SCOTTISH TELEVISION" do the same.

Variants:
 * A Nighttime variant shows the thistle animating (slowly) against clips of Glasgow or Edinburgh scenery at night.
 * A Christmas variant in 1993 and 1994 shows a flashing Christmas lights time with several colored lights light up around the still thistle. The Christmas 1995 variant shows a thistle.
 * Sometimes, it was seen without text.
 * In the last episode of the 2nd series of "What's Up, Doc?" the 1993 Scottish endcap was tilted and it is covered in flames of fire, that was possibly caused the explosion that comes from the tank that appears in the set.

Technique: The background and the flipping, as well as the effects used in the other variants.

Music/Sounds: A four-note horn fanfare.

Music/Sounds Variants:
 * The Nighttime variant used a jazzy saxophone rendition of the normal music.
 * The Christmas variant uses a gentle Christmas-like tune with harps and jingle bells.

Availability: Saved on Taggart episodes and other shows such as Hurricanes, Wolf It, How 2, Fun House, Wheel of Fortune, and Art Attack, among others.

9th Logo (October 6, 1996-February 27, 2000)
Logo: Against a cloudy purple background, several large glass thistles pan back to reveal the silver thistle from before. A blurry white cloud below sharpens up to reveal the words "SCOTTISH TELEVISION" in white.

Variants:
 * During the nighttime, the background is a darker purple.
 * There is an version seen before movies with several names of genres in many different fonts. The background is also darker and there are many words and objects in the background that are translucent and there are also 2 black bars, making it resemble a 16:9 ratio screen.

Technique: The thistles and the "focusing".

Music/Sounds: A more calm-sounding version of the 8th logo's music.

Music/Sounds Variants:
 * The nighttime variant has a soothing rendition of the music.
 * The movie variant has a majestic theme.

Availability:
 * Saved on original programming, including Taggart episodes, Art Attack, How 2, Fun House, Wheel of Fortune, and several TV-movies, among many others.
 * The version without the 1989 ITV logo appears on Sherlock Holmes in the 22nd Century, although it is removed on most prints of the series or plastered with other logos (like Les Studios Tex on DIC Kids Network/Qubo airings, or Buena Vista International Television on some European Spanish prints), although it was preserved on the first three episodes of the series found on the TV Guide Spotlight: Super Action Animation DVD from Mill Creek Entertainment, as well as some other DVD releases.

10th Logo (February 28, 2000-January 5, 2003)
Logo: We see a short film relating to Scotland, which culminates in the appearance of a modified version of a large square on top with several lights flashing inside it and "scottish tv" (the blue color around "tv" being slightly lighter) below appearing via a "focusing" effect.

Variant: "An SMG business" byline would be added in later years.

Technique: The live-action footage and lights in the square.

Music/Sounds: A rather futuristic techno tune.

Availability: Saved on programming from the era, like Taggart, Wheel of Fortune and Rebus.

11th Logo (January 6, 2003-May 30, 2006)
Logo: Like the then-current generic ITV1 ident, we see a montage of various ITV1 personalities, which ends with a shot of the STV logo from before, minus the square on top, against a series of blue panels. The logo zooms toward us a bit.

Variants:
 * There is a different variant in which the Scottish TV logo slides toward the bottom right in pieces before coming together. Once again, this is just like the then-current ITV1 generic ident.
 * A regional variant was used featuring various Scottish TV personalities, and a national variant was also used featuring various ITV personalities.

Technique: The panels and zooming.

Music/Sounds: A rather uninspired jazz-like tune, or an equally uninspired guitar tune. This is sometimes accompanied by a continuity announcement.

Availability: Extinct.

12th Logo (May 31, 2006-March 22, 2009)
Logo: In each variant various people are seen grabbing and looking around a blue "S" on different places. One of them puts the "S" on the center, and it flashes and the word "stv" appears at the left of its bottom area.

Variant: In August 2007, The "S" was for the station's 50th birthday.

Technique: Mostly live-action.

Music/Sounds: TBA.

Availability: Can be found on programs from the era.

13th Logo (March 23, 2009-June 1, 2014)
Logo: There is a random clip shown at the beginning at the logo. Later, it flips to a still picture, followed by a series of them. When the logo zooms out to the left, it reveals that they are inside of a diamond-shaped photo album on a dark blue background. The diamond then shows different colors before closing into a white arrow and bands of the colors appear in the background. "stv" in the same font then fades and flips onto the arrow as the URL appears on the bottom right corner.

Variants:
 * Numerous idents for various TV shows were created including I'm a Celebrity, Underbelly, Taggart, The X Factor, the 2010 World Cup, Downtown Abbey, STV Appeal, Coronation Street, Emmerdale, Dancing on Ice, and Britain's Got Talent.
 * There's also variants for each season of the year.

Technique: The clips, the arrow and text flipping into place. This was designed by BDA Creative.

Music/Sounds: TBA.

Availability: Extinct.

14th Logo (June 2, 2014- )
Logo: TBA.

Technique: TBA. Designed by DixonBaxi.

Music/Sounds: TBA.

Availability: Current.