QR Code Design & Customisation
Make QR codes that look as good as they scan. Guides on color, logo placement, sizing, shapes, and the design rules that keep your codes reliably readable.
Try the Generator →Logo & Visual Design
How to Create a QR Code with Your Logo
Step-by-step guide to embedding your brand logo into a QR code without breaking scannability — with safe zone and contrast rules.
Read more →QR Code Logo Design Guidelines: Size, Placement & Safe Zones
The exact rules for logo size, safe zone percentages, and placement that keep your branded QR codes scannable in all conditions.
Read more →QR Code with Image Background: Design & Scannability Tips
How to overlay a QR code onto a background image while maintaining the contrast ratios needed for reliable scanning.
Read more →Color & Style
QR Code Colors: How to Customise Without Breaking Scannability
The rules of foreground/background contrast for custom-colored QR codes — and the specific combinations that cause scan failures.
Read more →QR Code Color Psychology: How Color Affects Scan Rates
How color choice influences perceived trust, brand alignment, and whether users actually point their camera at your QR code.
Read more →QR Code Shapes & Frames: Creative Options That Still Scan
Explore custom module shapes, rounded corners, and call-to-action frames — and understand which design variations remain scanner-safe.
Read more →Size, Print & Accessibility
QR Code Size Guide: The Right Dimensions for Every Print Medium
Recommended QR code dimensions for business cards, flyers, posters, billboards, and product packaging based on scan distance.
Read more →QR Code Minimum Size: How Small Can a QR Code Be?
The physics of QR code scanning — what determines the absolute minimum printable size and how error correction level affects it.
Read more →QR Code Accessibility: Inclusive Design for All Users
How to make QR codes accessible to users with visual impairments, older devices, and low-light environments — with alternative access patterns.
Read more →10 Common QR Code Design Mistakes That Kill Scan Rates
The design errors that look fine on screen but fail in the real world — from insufficient quiet zones to inverted color contrast.
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