Say goodbye to Colorado’s triangular green mountain logo. Gov. Jared Polis has decided it’s time for a new look.

The governor unveiled a new state logo Tuesday. It has multicolored mountains housed within the “C” from the state flag. An evergreen tree is off to the side.

“We want to provide a fresh representation of the state brand,” Polis said during a press conference with reporters.

Each color on the logo represents a different part of the state. The red is for the red soil and rocks, the yellow is for the wheat field of the great plans and the blue base represents Colorado’s rivers and lakes. Polis said the old logo focused on the mountains, and while they’re great, there’s a lot more to Colorado.

The new look “better reflects our whole state — really is consistent with our goal of having a Colorado for all,” he said.

It also comes at no additional cost to taxpayers.

The last state logo redesign in 2013 caused a bit of controversy when the Hickenlooper administration spent about $2.4 million, Polis said. The new governor used internal resources rather than hiring an outside firm for the new logo and plans to phase it in over the coming years to avoid replacement costs.

“So when business cards, people run out, the new ones will have the new logo,” Polis said.

The move brought some Republican support for the Democratic governor amid the bitter partisanship of the current General Assembly session.

“We may not agree on much, @GovofCO, but I like this,” tweeted former Senate President Kevin Grantham, a Canon City Republican. “Much better than our previous HazMat branding.”