Carnival Legend has a new look. Red, white and blue graphics are now stretching across the bow of one of Carnival Cruise Line’s most recognizable ships.
Carnival Cruise Line has officially unveiled a new bow design called “From Sea to Shining Sea,” starting with The Carnival Legend, which returned to service this week following a 16-day dry dock in Freeport.
The refreshed look debuted just ahead of Memorial Day weekend and marks the beginning of a wider visual refresh across Carnival’s U.S.-based fleet.
The new design features sweeping patriotic graphics inspired by “America the Beautiful,” with layered red-and-blue striping spreading across the ship’s bow beneath the Carnival funnel.
It’s a noticeably different look from the simpler hull designs Carnival ships have carried for years — and one the company says is meant to reinforce its positioning as “America’s Cruise Line.”
Carnival says the new bow crest will gradually appear across its U.S.-based ships during future dry docks and new ship deliveries.
The Carnival Magic will become the next ship to receive the updated design when it returns to service from dry dock in PortMiami on May 26.
The rollout will continue over the next several years across much of the fleet, although two future ships — The Carnival Jubilee and the upcoming The Carnival Tropicale, scheduled to debut in 2028 — will retain the Texas star currently displayed on their bows.
The redesign arrives at a moment when cruise lines are increasingly leaning into stronger visual branding across their fleets, particularly as ships compete more aggressively for attention on social media, in port and during destination marketing campaigns.
And Carnival’s ships remain some of the most recognizable in the Caribbean.
Few cruise brands sail more Caribbean itineraries than Carnival.
The line operates massive year-round programs across the Bahamas, Jamaica, Grand Cayman, Cozumel, Aruba, Curaçao, St. Thomas, San Juan and dozens of other ports throughout the region.
Ships depart from nearly every major U.S. cruise gateway, including Miami, Port Canaveral, Galveston, New Orleans, Baltimore, Jacksonville, Tampa and Long Beach.
That reach is a major part of the company’s branding push around the new bow design.
Carnival says the crest is intended to reflect the company’s coast-to-coast U.S. footprint and the millions of passengers it carries annually.
“With the debut of this new crest, we’re reinforcing what guests have long known: Carnival is proud to be America’s Cruise Line,” said Christine Duffy, president of Carnival Cruise Line.
The company continues operating one of the largest cruise fleets in North America, particularly across short Caribbean sailings and Bahamas itineraries.
The Carnival Legend returned following a more than two-week dry dock in Freeport, Bahamas, where the ship received the updated bow graphics along with other technical and cosmetic work.
The ship continues sailing Caribbean itineraries following the refurbishment.
Carnival has increasingly used dry dock periods not only for maintenance and onboard upgrades, but also for larger branding refreshes across its fleet.
