Chelsea‘s icon and England’s golden boy Cole Palmer, has dropped down on form, struggling with injuries and inconsistency.
Amidst the chaos at Chelsea, with the sudden departure of Enzo Maresca and the arrival of Liam Rosenior, it is to be seen how the new gaffer will continue his relationship with Chelsea’s no.10, as Palmer is seen to be the face of the club for quite a while now.
In such a scenario, Palmer has unveiled his logo, something that is familiar with the football fanatics.
A logo of his celebration had been trademarked by him.
In the release video, he is seen saying, “This is built not shouted”, meaning the impact of his composed, ice cold celebration, made by rubbing his arms crossed.
An interesting aspect of the logo is that along with his celebration, it includes his initials, C and P extended to form the arm rub celebration.
The design is appreciated unanimously by everybody particularly the blend of his celebration and initials with simplicity and contrasting colour scheming.
just clocked that his initials are in the form of his celebration wow https://t.co/1kyWnbMJ2l
— 🦈 (@cfcyusxf) January 26, 2026
This Cole Palmer logo is hard. It communicates whatever there is about him and his brand 🥶 pic.twitter.com/QifwXp94kb
— ANGEL TOPEDO (@ThoughtPillow) January 27, 2026
The designer deserves A LOT for this.
— football takes (@takesonfootball) January 26, 2026
The celebration and the CP.
10/10 LOGO!!!!! https://t.co/rRI7bqeNh6
Cole Palmer trademarked logo
— Denver™ (@DenverDML) January 27, 2026
🥶 🥶
This could be the greatest trademarked logo in the history of football pic.twitter.com/E984RKICNv
However minor critics were made on the inspiration and choice of the design.
Many thought it looked like the food dish, pretzel, a pastry made out of dough.
The logo it’s a dish that is served cold. 🥶 🥨 pic.twitter.com/SMEsdiUned
— Barça Nation (@GAMEjpeg) January 27, 2026
The design almost had the resemblance of the celebration but lacked a hand extension, maybe to look stylish and unique.
Could have at least added some hands 🤣 https://t.co/DOaXKglX0U pic.twitter.com/8d4hz1w8An
— rudy (@RudyR23) January 28, 2026
A joking comment was made on the natural shivering action, which currently is trademarked by Palmer.
Shivering will now get you a lawsuit https://t.co/kX9aLMAw6g
— 🇪🇪 Estonian Football Podcast 🇪🇪 (@EstonianFBP) January 27, 2026
The origin of the celebration is well known, that Palmer himself had said about, how he saw Morgan Rogers do it at Middlesborough, but he also mentioned that him doing it first time had tipped off the hype around it and everybody started copying it.
Ofcourse Palmer contributed to the popularity of the celebration, but a trademark now, puts everyone at risk, trying to do the celebration.
Initially, he had trademarked the term “Cold Palmer”, for prevention of commercial usage.
Although the real owner of the celebration is considered to be Trae Young, a Basketball player of Washington Wizards in NBA. He had been in the eyes of fans having made the celebration his own since 2020
Even though, Palmer deserves the credit for popularising the celebration for majority of the audience, there is a bit of unfairness in trademarking a celebration inspired from somebody. But, unfortunately, his logo had hit gold with its design, which might eventually make other forget about the origin.



