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In the 1970s, graphic designer Milton Glaser brought a New York state tourism advertising campaign to life with his I NY logo, changing ... Between the “ugly bubbly heart” and “weird ...
The city of New York has unveiled an updated version of the iconic “I Heart NY” logo, but native New Yorkers are less than happy about the rebrand. On 20 March, a committee of elected ...
We could empathize with the logo, because we could make it ourselves (sans heart) on our typewriters. The rounded serifs jive with the bulbous heart. All the elements are flat shapes, making it ...
The version that appeared in the newspaper, which lays out the logo on one line, is not as unappealing as the two-line version, which sticks the balloon heart in the upper right corner next to the ...
Glaser returned to the simple design after the 9/11 attacks, reimaging the logo with a heart that was slightly blackened in the lower corner, reminiscent of ashes or a char from flame. He changed ...
no, not since New Coke—no, not even New Coke—well, then, not since the Dodgers left Brooklyn has any intended innovation met so much appalled resistance as the proposed new logo for post ...