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Working with Assets

Working with Third-Party Logos

How Flint automatically fetches real company logos for partners, integrations, customers, and competitors.

How It Works

When you ask Flint to add logos for partners, integrations, customers, or competitors, it first searches your asset library for existing logos, then fetches real company logos if none are found. This means you always get the right logo: your uploaded version when available, or an up-to-date official one.

Flint keeps these logos up to date automatically. If a company rebrands, the logo on your page updates without any manual work.

Example of third-party logos automatically fetched by Flint, showing Windsurf and Reducto logos

Logo Variants and Formatting

Flint pulls official logos directly from company brand assets. It will choose the best variant for your page background, but you can also request light or dark theme variants when available.

Some formatting options (like converting a colored logo to monochrome) depend on what the company provides. Flint can apply custom CSS on top of the logo for more customization.

Changing Logo Colors

Third-party logos are displayed as standard image files, similar to a photo. This means some color changes are straightforward and others have limits — here's what to expect.

What works reliably

  • Make logos grayscale — removes all color so logos look uniform. Great for logo walls where you want a consistent, muted appearance.
  • Reduce opacity — makes logos more faded or transparent, without changing their color.
  • Flip to light or dark — logos that look great on a white background can disappear on a dark one (and vice versa). Flint picks the right version automatically, but you can always ask: "Use the light version of the Stripe logo for this dark section."
  • Make logos all-black or all-white — useful for logo bars on colored backgrounds.

What has limits

Changing a logo to an exact custom color (like your brand's specific shade of blue) is trickier. Because logos are loaded as image files, their colors aren't individually accessible the way text colors are. Flint can approximate a tint, but results vary by logo — a simple flat logo will tint cleanly, while a complex multi-color logo may not look right.

If you need precise color control over a logo, the best approach is to upload the original logo file yourself and tell Flint what color you'd like. Flint will do its best to match it.

Things to watch out for

  • Logo disappears on a dark background — ask Flint to use the light version of the logo, or to make it white.
  • Grayscale and fading are different things — grayscale removes color but keeps the logo fully solid; reducing opacity makes it semi-transparent. You can use both together for a very subtle effect: "Make the logos grayscale and slightly faded."
  • Inverting colors on a colorful logo rarely looks right — inverting works well on logos that are already black or white, but turns a full-color logo into unexpected hues. Stick to grayscale for multi-color logos.

Common Use Cases

  • Partner logos: "Add logos for our technology partners: Salesforce, HubSpot, and Marketo"
  • Integration logos: "Show the integrations we support in a logo grid"
  • Customer logos: "Add a 'Trusted by' section with customer logos"
  • Competitor comparisons: "Create a comparison page against Competitor X"
  • Social proof sections: "Add 'As featured in' with publication logos"

Flint has the strongest coverage for well-known companies. If a logo doesn't look right, you can ask Flint for a different type (e.g., icon or symbol) or upload the correct one in chat.