It will be the first Winter Classic south and west of St. Louis. It will feature two teams playing outdoors for the first time: the Dallas Stars and the Nashville Predators. And it will be at the iconic Cotton Bowl Stadium on New Year's Day.

The logo, unveiled as part of a press conference at the stadium Wednesday, looks like a big belt buckle that came straight from a Texas cowboy.

As if forged by a smith, not designed by a graphic artist, it seems 3D, shining in sterling silver with gold highlights. The border is made of rope and rivets. There are flourishes and four stars. The lettering has a western flair.

It fits into the Winter Classic family, but at the same time, it's fresh.

Which is the goal for the event as a whole.

"As you start going through this process, we collectively brainstorm and discuss, 'What makes the most sense for this event, this location, without being too whimsical?' " NHL vice president of creative services Paul Conway said. "You want to be careful not to be too predictable on a certain level. You want to make sure it comes across and feels like it's part of the Winter Classic brand, yet still feel unique. But everything certainly takes form and takes root in that early development."

The logo is important, because it comes first and sets the foundation for what comes afterward, from the signage around town to the design of the field. The process of designing the logo usually takes two to three months. Sometimes the NHL and its partners narrow the field to five different looks before picking the winner.

"From the very beginning, we knew this was the direction to go," NHL chief content officer Steve Mayer said. "Then we honed in on the belt buckle and kind of making it pop a bit more for the final product. This was one of, I think, the easier ones in terms of knowing what we wanted because we saw something that really sparks it."

The NHL and Fanbrandz, a sports branding agency in Montclair, New Jersey, started by looking at the history of Winter Classic logos. A consistent thread has been a script "Winter" and a bold "Classic" in the foreground.

"When you see them all side by side, they look like they all come from the same visual voice," Conway said. "They certainly evolve over time. They have a consistent look, which has been achieved through the Winter Classic typography. They take on an evolution, if you will, inspired by the location that we end up in."

In 2016 in Foxboro, Massachusetts, the logo looked like an old New England sign. In 2017 in St. Louis, the right part of the "W" in "Winter" soared into the left side of the Arch. In 2018 in New York, the dominant image was an "X," the Roman numeral representing the 10th Winter Classic, topped by the Empire State Building and the Statue of Liberty. In 2019 at Notre Dame, the logo was a simple green shamrock.

OK. Dallas. Big D. Everything's bigger in Texas. What represents that identity? What creates a sense of place?

The NHL and Fanbrandz pulled logos and images to study for inspiration, everything from neon roadhouse signs to Cotton Bowl programs to western movie posters, while keeping this in mind: The NHL held the 2016 NHL All-Star Game in Nashville, and the logo was shaped like a guitar pick. This event will feature the Predators and country music, but it can't sound like the same old song.

"The biggest issue here was to be different than Nashville, but yet understand exactly where we're at and be unique to Texas," Mayer said.

The NHL and Fanbrandz latched onto belt buckles and Texas Rangers badges, which combine bold, instantly recognizable symbols with fine, hand-carved details. They studied silversmithing, color accents and western lettering. From pencil sketches to computer concepts, they tweaked and tweaked again.

"Some of the early iterations were feeling a little flat," Conway said. "How do we push that metallic feel and get that metallic texture in there?"

Said Mayer: "When we animate this, it will really feel three dimensional and like a belt buckle. But when it's flat, how do you make it look like it's not?"

They found a way. Let's just say it's not their first rodeo.

"For us," Mayer said, "this is another notch on the belt."

The next step will be to peel off parts of the logo, make them their own assets and develop an identity system -- in other words, to use them to create secondary logos and design motifs that feel connected.

"It's the subtle design," Mayer said. "You've got to look behind the logo, underneath the logo and see the craftsmanship, as if they were sculptors or jewelry designers. … It's not only what's in your face, the wordmark that's on there, it's what's in the background that then becomes part of everything we do."