Star Wars Symbols Poster - 120 Factions

This print collects 120 canon Star Wars symbols into one visual archive: faction emblems, organization marks, clan signs, criminal organizations, military crests, and personal symbols from across the galaxy. It is designed less like a movie poster and more like a quiet graphic taxonomy of allegiance, power, and identity in Star Wars.

Star Wars poster showing faction symbols and emblems from every era of the Star Wars universe on a black background

* Final printed poster may differ slightly from the image shown.

EUR 43.25
Product Details

Size
A2 (420 × 594 mm / 16.5 × 23.4 in)

Paper
200gsm matte finish, minimal reflections

Print
Giclée fine art - the same archival method used by museums and galleries

Shipping & Returns

Shipping
Orders ship within 2–5 business days from the Netherlands. €4.90 NL / €9.90 EU / €14.90 ROW. Free Worldwide Shipping on all orders over €75.

Delivery
EU: 3–7 business days. UK/US/CA: 5–12 business days. Rest of world: 7–21 business days.

Returns
If your poster arrives damaged or misprinted, email a photo within 30 days and we'll send a replacement, no questions asked. Lost in transit? We'll reship at no cost.

Some Star Wars symbols are more than decoration

The Rebel starbird can stand for hope before anyone says the word. The Galactic Empire cog does not need a Stormtrooper next to it to feel cold and organized. The Jedi Order symbol carries centuries of myth in a few clean curves. These marks work because they do what good symbols should do: they compress a whole world into one shape.

That was the idea behind this poster.

The result is a visual compendium of 120 canon symbols from the Star Wars universe. It is a poster about allegiance. Who belongs where. Who fights for what. Which groups rise, break apart, return, or survive as a mark on armor, a flag, a wall, a ship, or a transmission screen.

Galactic Empire cog symbol redrawn as a vector for the Star Wars symbols poster
Star Wars faction symbols poster displayed aboard a spaceship interior

A galaxy built from symbols

Star Wars has always understood the power of a simple mark.

The most famous symbols in the saga are almost as recognizable as the characters themselves. The Galactic Empire, the Rebel Alliance, the Galactic Republic, the Sith Empire, the Jedi Order, and the First Order all have shapes that feel designed to carry weight. They are not just logos placed on props. They help the world feel political, old, and organized.

What surprised me during the research was how strong many of the smaller symbols are.

Some of them could sit in a gallery of mid-century logo design and not look out of place. I kept thinking of designers like Stefan Kanchev, who could make a symbol feel sharp, balanced, and alive with only a few forms. The famous Star Wars emblems have that quality, but so do some of the less expected ones.

That is what made the project interesting. The Star Wars universe is full of marks that most viewers only notice for a second. Some are printed on armor. Some appear in animated series. Some sit in the background of a scene. Some belong to groups that only hardcore fans will know. But when you collect them and place them together, you start to see Star Wars as a designed visual system.

Not just a story world. A world with its own graphic archive.

Star Wars symbols poster displayed as wall art in a gallery-style room

How the poster is organized

The poster is arranged by affiliation and by the size or importance of the group.

The largest and most recognizable factions sit higher on the page. Related groups sit near each other. Jedi-aligned symbols have their own visual neighborhood. Sith and Imperial marks speak to each other. Criminal organizations are grouped together. Mandalorian clans sit as a family of forms. Hutt clans, military forces, rebel cells, corporate groups, and personal marks each find their place in the larger structure.

Star Wars is visually loud. It has glowing swords, giant ships, alien creatures, desert planets, chrome helmets, and hyperspace lines. A poster like this can easily become too busy. I wanted the opposite: a calm archive. White symbols on a dark star field. Small labels. Enough space for the marks to breathe.

It should feel like fan art, but not shout like fan art.

Detail crop of the Star Wars symbols poster showing faction insignias with labels on a dark background

Why I kept it canon

Star Wars has a long expanded universe, and many symbols that fans know come from games, comics, books, and older material that no longer sits in the same official continuity. I had to choose a clear rule, because a poster has limits.

My hierarchy was simple. If a symbol appeared on screen, it had the strongest claim. If it was documented with a symbol on Wookieepedia and connected to canon material, it was also likely to be included. From there I made judgment calls. How important is the faction or character? How often does the symbol appear? Is it central to Star Wars, or does it flash past once and disappear forever?

Close-up angled view of the printed Star Wars faction symbols poster

Redrawing the galaxy

The research did not stop at collecting images.

Many symbols existed in low resolution, appeared at odd angles, or had different versions across sources. When possible, I checked the films and series directly. Wookieepedia helped me validate names, appearances, and the canon or Legends divide. In a few cases, I used behind-the-scenes books to understand a symbol better.

Some marks had to be redrawn completely by hand.

At Attin and Clan Kryze are good examples. The available references were too poor to use directly, so I rebuilt them into clean vector forms. That meant keeping the character of the original mark while making it consistent with the rest of the poster.

Star Wars At-Attin's symbol recreated for poster
Star Wars symbols poster as fan wall art decor

A Star Wars poster for grown-up rooms

Most Star Wars posters lead with the obvious things: Darth Vader, the Millennium Falcon, lightsabers, X-wings, movie titles, dramatic poses.

This is a Star Wars poster for people who like the universe, but also care about design. It lets you show the reference without turning the room into a cinema lobby. The black field and white symbols keep it restrained. From a distance, it almost reads like a constellation chart or a graphic taxonomy. Up close, it becomes a fan object full of small discoveries.

That makes it work in an office, a studio, a collector room, or a home workspace. It also makes it easier to give as a gift. You do not need to know someone's favorite character or film. If they care about Star Wars, they will find something here. If they care about logos, symbols, or visual systems, they will find another layer.

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