Las Vegas Lights FC logo and rendering of field at Cashman Center. (Las Vegas Lights FC)

Las Vegas Lights FC logo. (Las Vegas Lights FC)

Brett Lashbrook, founder of Las Vegas Soccer LLC, during an event celebrating his new Las Vegas soccer team to play in the United Soccer League during an event at the Zappos campus in Las Vegas on Friday, Aug. 11, 2017. Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-Journal @Erik_Verduzco

Brett Lashbrook, founder of the Las Vegas Soccer LLC, during an United Soccer League event to celebrate the newest team in the league at the Zappos campus in Las Vegas on Friday, Aug. 11, 2017. Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-Journal @Erik_Verduzco

Founder and President of Las Vegas Soccer LLC. Brett Lashbrook makes his presentation during a meeting of the Las Vegas City Council Wednesday, July 19, 2017. Sam Morris/Las Vegas News Bureau

United Soccer League president Jake Edwards, left, and CEO Alec Papadakis, right, look on as Brett Lashbrook, founder of Las Vegas Soccer LLC, celebrates his new Las Vegas soccer team to play in the USL during an event at the Zappos campus in Las Vegas on Friday, Aug. 11, 2017. Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-Journal @Erik_Verduzco

Las Vegas Lights FC owner Brett Lashbrook learned from his hometown MLS team, Sporting Kansas City, that even the tiniest details in a soccer logo can resonate with a fan base.

Sporting Kansas City’s crest bears a small diagonal line that’s easily overlooked, but locals recognize it as the Missouri -Kansas border. And Lashbrook strived for that same attention to detail when working on a logo for his United Soccer League team, which was released Monday.

“When you’re from Kansas City, you immediately see that and you say ‘that’s cool,’

“Lashbrook said. “It is easier said than done. How do you create a logo for the local community?”

The Lights’ crest is his team’s best attempt, formed with the help of more than 400 fan submissions.

It was through fans that the crest found its shape — the outline of the famed “Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas” sign turned 90 degrees. The idea to spell things out in neon tubing also came from fan ideas, modeled partially after the lettering used by local music festival Life is Beautiful.

The colors came from submissions, too. The Lights first put out a placeholder logo in which they didn’t intend the colors blue, yellow and pink to be official. But the colors became official after many fans submitted those colors, which come from the city of Las Vegas logo.

“They’re brighter colors,” Lashbrook said, noting that many of the other pro sports teams in town use darker shades. “The ability to have a different shade or brightness I thought was good.”

Lashbrook, who helped Orlando City SC get on its feet in the MLS, thinks he can use the team’s unique colors to stand out much like his previous team did in a new soccer market.

“The thing that stuck with me from my time in Orlando was having a different color. In Orlando, we used to own the color purple,” Lashbrook said. “There’s only so many cities where you can get away with the color pink.”

The color pink is featured on the crest in the star at the bottom, which is based off the stars seen in the city of Las Vegas logo.

The “FC” is featured in big letters above the star, as a nod to the name that finished runner-up to Las Vegas Lights FC. Fans voted more than 10,000 times to select the team’s name and the more traditional Las Vegas FC came in a close second, so those three words were featured prominently in the logo.

“I think I am really proud that the club is representing the traditional soccer shield, but we’re putting our own Vegas twist on it,” Lashbrook said. “We’re Vegas-ifying the sport. This is Las Vegas, and I think this sign embraces and reflects the community.”

Contact Ben Gotz at bgotz@reviewjournal.com. Follow@BenSGotz on Twitter.