Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Communicating with Images Task 5 - Logo Interpretation



Google Logo Interpretation
In 1998, Sergey Brin created a computerized version of the Google letters using the free graphics program GIMP. The typeface was changed and an exclamation mark was added, mimicking the Yahoo! logo. "There were a lot of different color iterations", says Ruth Kedar, the graphic designer who developed the now-famous logo. "We ended up with the primary colors, but instead of having the pattern go in order, we put a secondary color on the L, which brought back the idea that Google doesn't follow the rules."

In 2010, the Google logo received its first major and permanent overhaul since May 31, 1999. The new logo was first previewed on November 8, 2009, and was officially launched on May 6, 2010. It utilises an identical typeface to the previous logo, but the "o" is distinctly more orange-colored in place of the previously more yellowish "o", as well as a much more subtle shadow rendered in a different shading style. On September 19, 2013, Google introduced a new "flat" (two-dimensional) logo with a slightly altered color palette. The old 2010 Google logo is still used on some pages, such as the Google Doodles page.

It might be that colors are assigned to letters according to whether their positions represent a prime number or don’t. Thus letters number 1, 2, 3 and 5 (all of them prime numbers) have a distinctive or “prime” color assigned: blue, red, yellow and green. Letters number 4 and 6 (not prime numbers) repeat colors -no longer “prime colors”- in the same order that such colors were assigned in the first time: blue and then red. If the sequence were to continue with new letters, the next letter, number 7, should have a new or “prime color” since 7 is prime; letters number 8, 9 and 10 should repeat colors in the pre established order: yellow, green and the same as 7′s; letter number 11, also a prime number, should have another new color, and so forth.


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