Logopedia
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1956–1957 (Florida) 1957-1958 (Carolinas) January-March 1958 1958–1981 (primary), 1981–1985 (secondary) 1982–1984
1956–1957 (Florida) 1957-1958 (Carolinas) January-March 1958 1958–1981 (primary), 1981–1985 (secondary) 1982–1984
1984–2004 2004–2006 2006–2016 2015-2016 (prototype), 2016–present
1984–2004 2004–2006 2006–2016 2015-2016 (prototype), 2016–present

1956–1958 (Florida)[]

Winn-Dixie - 1955

Winn-Dixie Stores, Inc. was formed on November 14, 1955 from the merger of the Winn & Lovett Grocery Company and Dixie-Home Stores. The first usage of the Winn-Dixie name for a store rather than for the parent company was on June 3, 1956.

1957-1958 (Carolinas)[]

Winn-Dixie - 1956 -December 6, 1956-
Designer:  Unknown
Typography:  Unknown
Launched:  May 2, 1957

This logo, based on the one Dixie-Home used, debuted a day after Winn-Dixie Stores' (the parent company) 38th anniversary.

January-March 1958[]

Winn-Dixie - 1958 -February 27, 1958-
Designer:  Unknown
Typography:  Custom
Launched:  January 7, 1958

1958–1981 (primary), 1981–1985 (secondary)[]

Winn Dixie - 1958
Designer:  Unknown
Typography:  Custom
Launched:  February 24, 1958 (Florida, Georgia)
March 10, 1958 (Carolinas)

The cornucopia was soon axed in favor of the more recognizable checkmark from sister store Kwik Chek.

1971–1978 (secondary)[]

Winn-Dixie - 1971

1977 (prototype)[]

Winn-DIxie - 1977

1982–2006[]

1982–2004[]

Winn-Dixie old logo

This logo was primarily used in commercials and in-store until 1984, when it made its leap to print advertisements as well.

1982–1984[]

Winn-Dixie - 1982
Designer:  Unknown
Typography:  Custom
Launched:  July 14, 1982

2004–2006[]

Winn Dixie - 2004
Designer:  Unknown
Typography:  Custom
Launched:  July 21, 2004

2006–2016[]

Winn dixie 2010
Designer:  Unknown
Typography:  Hoefler Text (modified)
Launched:  February 15, 2006

2015-2016 (prototype), 2016–present[]

Winn-Dixie - 2016
Designer:  Unknown
Typography:  Foco Bold
Launched:  April 13, 2016

The full adoption of this logo in April 2016 was the end of a slow phasing in of a new design scheme for Southeastern Grocers' brands, to better align it with sister brands Harveys, Fresco y Mas (who also underwent slow rollouts of their own, parallel to W-D), and formerly Bi-Lo, whose logo already contained round-cornered letters similar in appearance to the Foco typeface.


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