Shareaholic
The Open Share Icon is designed to
help users easily identify shareable content.
100% open, free to use, community-driven goodness.
     

Download - Open Share Icon Set

Size: 1.4MB; includes everything you need to get started

Design Notes:

The Open Share icon conveys the act of sharing by visually representing one hand passing an object to another hand, as in "pass it on" or "sharing". The icon also represents an "eye", as in "look at this".

Complete the Open Icon Set:

Feed Icon OPML Icon Open Share Icon GeoTag Icon

License:

Shareaholic has made the Open Share Icon freely available for use by others under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.

Usage Guidelines:

This website contains suggested guidelines for use of the icons, and is published and maintained by Shareaholic as a service to -

  • the community of individuals and organizations wishing to use the Open Share Icon in connection with their own products and services and
  • members of the general public who use those products and services and rely on the standard meaning of the Open Share Icon as indicating shareable content, and the act of sharing.

We strongly believe in the value of open, and encouraging the healthy usage of the icon. As part of that, it's important for users to be able to trust the Open Share Icon and not be confused about the relationship with the many people and organizations who use the icon.

The icon is freely available for general use in connection with content sharing, in all its forms. Shareable content may include blog posts, articles, photos, videos, etc.

If you are developing or have developed a sharing related application, product or service, you may make use of the Open Share Icon to help foster standardization, recognition, and help promote a consistent icon for sharing on the web.

There are no restrictions on the size, color, opacity, or other such parameters. It's your site, your content. We do ask that you that in the interests of standardization, the use of the unmodified icon is preferable.

The spirit of these guidelines is to encourage adoption of the Open Share Icon by both individuals and corporate entities who may use it freely (on web pages, in products or services) for the purposes for which it is intended. It, or confusingly-similar variants, are not intended, for example, to be used as part of a trademark, service mark, logo, or in any other way that would imply to a casual observer that the icon was exclusively associated with a particular application or website. This includes not displaying the Icon as the most prominent element on your web page or web application.

Note that as the creators of the Open Share Icon project, only Shareaholic has the appropriate use of the icon as a primary application icon and website logo (including a favicon).

Note that these guidelines are not intended to discourage other uses of the Open Share Icon that conform to the overall spirit of these guidelines. However in the interests of providing a consistent experience for users we suggest that providers of sharing and sharing related services make minimum use of alternative representations of the Open Share Icon.

Note that the above guidelines are not intended to restrict the ways in which the icon might be represented by assistive technologies designed for use by people with impaired vision. (Such technologies include software to magnify the contents of the screen and/or change screen colors, contrast, and brightness; alternative stylesheets for websites; and the like.)

 

New Share API: Build sharing easily into your own apps. More »

Seen & used by millions every day:

Stuff networkworld.com Scribefire
 
WeatherUnderground Shareaholic SmugMug

Why do we need another icon?

The design of the Open Share Icon is inspired by Alex King's original Share Icon - . The original Share Icon, designed with community input, driven and popularized by Alex King was later sold to ShareThis/Nextumi, Inc.

Since being acquired, that icon has been subject to take down notices by ShareThis/Nextumi, Inc, and its original intended usage restricted in practice. We, as a community, felt these actions by ShareThis/Nextumi, Inc did not reflect the original spirit with which the original share icon was created, and hence felt the need for a new, truly open and free alternative. Use either icon, but please make an informed choice.

Why publish any usage guidelines at all?

We felt it was important that the icon "mean something" to people, particularly to end users who are just getting acquainted with the concept of sharing web content and might see the icon as a relatively reliable guide by which to discover content that is shareable, and the act of sharing in general. Taking a totally laissez faire approach might cause those users' expectations to be completely violated.

Are you required to follow the proposed usage guidelines?

We hope that users of the icon will honor the guidelines in the spirit in which they are intended.

I don’t like green; can I use the icon in a different color?

We don't discourage alternative uses and representations of the icon that conform to the overall spirit of the guidelines, including using a different color for the icon in cases where it may be appropriate (e.g., to match the overall color scheme for your website).

However at the same time we believe that the color of the icon is an important visual cue for people, and that arbitrarily changing the color could disrupt that cue and could confuse users. (Just as, for example, changing the standard colors used for road signs could confuse drivers.) We therefore recommend not changing the color of the icon when it's used in the context of sharing and its related products and services.

Design Credit:

The Open Share Icon is an initiative started and spearheaded by Shareaholic. The Icon itself was designed by Frank Dobbelaere, David Hall, Bruce McKenzie, and Jay Meattle which they designed based on the larger input of the community and donated to the project.

The guidelines and FAQs for the Open Share Icon are derived in content and spirt from the ones established by the Mozilla Foundation for the standard orange RSS Feed Icons. A big big thank you to Mozilla.