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In 1991, Baskin-Robbins changed its signature logo to have the names “Baskin” and “Robbins” sandwich the number 31. This is ...
What do Amazon, Baskin-Robbins and Toblerone have in common? They all have hidden messages in their logos. Here's what they ...
Let’s get straight to the point: the font used in the “You Wouldn’t Steal A Car” campaign wasn’t exactly above board. Social media sleuths recently discovered that the ad’s gritty ...
You wouldn't steal a font: Famous anti-piracy campaign may have used pirated typeface The dramatic adverts, which compared pirating films to stealing cars, handbags and televisions, became a piece ...
The irony of it having used a pirated font is just precious.” After first appearing in 2004, the advert was discontinued in 2009 but has remained on cassettes and DVDs in people’s collection.
A Bluesky user called Rib used the Wayback Machine to confirm that the XBand Rough font is embedded in a 2005 PDF file hosted on the official anti-piracy campaign website. Van Rossum is no longer ...
The distinctive font used in the ad appears to be FF Confidential, created by Just van Rossum in 1992. But there's another font called XBand Rough that's virtually identical, and when journalist ...
Augusta to redesign logo, city fonts, to make online materials accessible to all City leaders want to get ahead of a 2027 Americans With Disabilities Act deadline to make all online city material ...
How to adjust your book's font size on your Kindle When it comes to reading, the typeface and size used can really make all the difference in terms of a comfortable experience.
Typeface infighting ensued, in which Clearview advocates argued the opposite—that the newer font was better. Ultimately, the FHWA told states they could use whichever font they liked.
To me, the smaller 10.5-point Aptos Regular font still outperforms the 11-point Calibri font. While a tad wide, it is gorgeous, easier to read than 11-point Calibri, and renders well on my phone.