This belt buckle logo plate is engineered as a branding hardware piece for belts and leather goods, featuring a raised “DG” design and a rich palladium gunmetal finish. It’s a common choice for luxury brands and fashion accessory lines that want a clean, high-end logo presentation. With nearly 20 years of manufacturing experience, our team handles custom tooling, size adjustments, and finish variations for bulk orders.
A belt buckle logo plate looks like a simple flat piece of metal, but in our workshop it’s actually one of the more demanding items to get right. Because it sits right in the middle of the buckle, at eye level, every small flaw in the tooling shows up immediately — a soft edge, an uneven plating tone, a logo that doesn’t sit dead-center. This guide walks through how we approach production of these plates, from mold development to the palladium gunmetal finish shown on this particular design, and what buyers typically ask us before placing a bulk order.
This style of logo plate uses a rectangular body with two parallel slot openings, allowing the belt strap or webbing to pass through and lock the plate in place without screws or rivets. It’s a clean installation method that’s popular with leather goods brands because it keeps the backside tidy — no visible hardware, no risk of the fastener loosening over time.
For this piece specifically, the dimensions run 47.3mm in length, 52.3mm in width, and 3.8mm in thickness, with a finished weight of 50.5g. That thickness matters more than people expect. Too thin, and the plate can bow slightly during the plating process or under strap tension. We keep wall thickness consistent across the mold so the plate holds its shape through years of daily wear.
Our metal logo hardware manufacturer process typically starts with Brass for this product category, since it gives sharp detail reproduction for raised lettering like the “DG” text shown here, though we also support brass, stainless steel, and aluminum depending on the weight and feel a brand wants.
The finish on this sample is a palladium base, which reads as a deep, matte gunmetal tone. Palladium plating tends to hold its color better than some nickel-based alternatives, and it doesn’t yellow or shift tone the way certain gold platings can after prolonged handling. In our plating line, we control bath time and current density closely to avoid the two most common defects on flat logo plates: uneven sheen across the surface, and plating buildup around the raised letter edges that can dull the crispness of the logo.
Because the logo sits raised above the plate surface rather than printed on, mold precision is everything. One thing buyers often ask us is how we keep the lettering edges sharp instead of rounded or soft. It comes down to the mold steel finishing — we polish the letter cavities individually before the mold goes into production, and we run a first-article sample specifically to check letter definition under angled light before mass production starts.
We offer a few ways to present a logo on this type of custom metal logo tag: raised lettering (as shown), recessed/engraved, laser marking for finer detail, or filled color in the recessed areas for brands that want a two-tone look. Each method has a different mold cost and lead time, so we usually recommend buyers send their logo artwork early so we can flag any details that might not reproduce cleanly at this size.

During mass production, we run plating adhesion checks and a visual inspection pass on every batch, screening for burrs along the slot openings, plating discoloration, and any casting porosity on the plate face. Flat plates like this one are actually easier to inspect than curved hardware — surface defects show up quickly under standard lighting — but the slot edges need extra attention since a rough edge there can fray the strap material over time.
We maintain quality certification documentation and are happy to provide the current valid certificates upon request during your sourcing evaluation.
For brands developing their own belt buckle logo plate design, our customization process usually covers logo shape and lettering style, plate size, finish color, and packaging. We can also adjust the slot width and spacing to match different strap widths, which is a detail that gets overlooked until the sample stage. For luxury brand belt hardware projects, we’ve found it helps to lock in the exact Pantone or finish reference early, since gunmetal and palladium tones can look different depending on lighting in photos versus in hand.
Custom packaging — individual poly bags, foam trays, or branded boxes — can be arranged alongside the hardware order.

Palladium and gunmetal-finished hardware generally holds up well, but a few storage habits extend its life considerably. We recommend keeping unused stock in a dry environment, away from direct humidity or sea-freight containers without desiccant packs, since metal plating is more prone to oxidation spots in damp conditions. Avoid prolonged contact with leather conditioners or acidic cleaning agents, which can dull plated surfaces over time. For finished goods already sewn into belts, a soft dry cloth is usually enough to keep the plate looking fresh — abrasive polishing compounds can wear down fine plating layers faster than expected.
Logo plates like this one show up across belt buckles, bag flap hardware, and small leather goods accents. A recurring challenge we see with fashion accessory hardware projects involves a designer brand wanting a matte finish that still reads clearly under retail lighting — matte finishes can sometimes flatten fine logo detail if the plating layer isn’t controlled carefully. In one common composite scenario, a mid-size European accessories brand needed a gunmetal finish that photographed consistently across both studio lighting and daylight product shots;
the solution came down to tightening the plating bath parameters and running extra QC checks under two different light temperatures before approving mass production. This kind of back-and-forth during sampling is fairly typical, and it’s part of why we encourage buyers to review physical samples rather than approving from photos alone.

If you’re developing a belt or leather goods line and need a logo plate that matches a specific finish or size, sending over your logo artwork and target dimensions is usually the fastest way to get an accurate quote and mold timeline. We can also send stock samples in the gunmetal finish shown here so you can evaluate the weight and finish in hand before committing to custom tooling.
For this type of single-piece hardware, our standard MOQ is 1000 pcs, though this can be adjusted depending on your order details and whether you’re planning ongoing production. If you’re testing a new design, we can discuss a smaller trial run alongside your sample order.
Stock samples in our existing finishes are provided free of charge. For a fully custom belt buckle logo plate — new logo, new mold, or a finish outside our standard range — there’s a sample fee, which gets fully deducted from your bulk order once you place it. Courier costs for shipping the samples are covered by the buyer.
Yes, custom logo tooling involves a one-time mold development fee, which varies based on the complexity of the design and lettering style.

10-15days for mass production after sample approval, with delivery time depending on order volume and shipping method. We’ll confirm exact timelines once your logo plate specifications and quantity are finalized.
Yes — we can match Pantone references or work from a physical sample you provide. For finishes like the palladium gunmetal shown here, we recommend approving a plating sample before mass production since gunmetal tones can vary slightly depending on lighting.
We can produce hardware compliant with REACH and RoHS requirements for markets that require it. Let us know your target market during the inquiry stage so we can confirm compliance documentation alongside your order.
This design supports zinc alloy, brass, stainless steel, and aluminum, depending on the weight, cost, and finish durability your project needs. Zinc alloy is the most common choice for logo plates like this one due to its fine detail reproduction for raised lettering.
We’ve been manufacturing metal hardware for close to two decades, working with leather goods and accessory brands on both stock and fully custom logo hardware projects.

DG-SH66 S Hook Carabiner Clip – Double Gate Aluminum Bag Hardware
Don’t risk your brand’s reputation on cheap, thin-plated hardware that tarnishes in months. Partner directly with a reliable Dongguan manufacturer. We support low MOQs starting at just 1000 pcs for custom hardware runs.
Our materials fully comply with international REACH/RoHS standards, and every custom electroplated order passes a strict 48-hour salt spray test before dispatch. Contact our engineering team today to request a quick quote or get free stock samples shipped within 12 hours.
| Attribute | Details |
|---|---|
| Product Name | Belt Buckle Logo Plate |
| Model | DG-LP040 |
| Material | Brass. Support zinc alloy, brass, stainless steel, and aluminum customization. |
| Weight | 50.5g |
| Structure | Rectangular flat plate with dual slot openings for strap/webbing insertion, raised logo lettering |
| Finish Options | Palladium / Gunmetal (as shown); Rainbow, Antique Brass, Light Gold, Rose Gold, and Nickel also available on request |
| Size/Dimensions | 47.3mm (L) x 52.3mm (W) x 3.8mm (Thickness) |
| Application | Belt buckle logo tags, leather goods branding, fashion accessory hardware |
| Installation Method | Slide-in insertion through dual strap slots, no screws required |
| Customization | Custom logo (raised/engraved/laser), custom size, custom finish/color, custom packaging |
| Packaging | 3-5days |
| MOQ | 1000 pcs (negotiable based on order details) |
| Sample Time | Free stock samples available; custom sample fees fully deductible from bulk orders. Courier fees are covered by the buyer. |
| Production Time | 10-15days |
| Delivery Time | 15-20days |
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