Messages: 7
Language: English
Alkanadi (User's profile) October 28, 2015, 6:16:57 AM
Given that the Cold War between the US and the now-defunct Soviet Union endured well into the 1980s, the Jubilee Symbol expressed a hope of global peace. It included both the English E and the Russian Э, joined together as if in embrace, celebrating the universal language and the peaceful mission for which it was inventedhttp://blogs.transparent.com/esperanto/
Esperanto + Эсперанто = EЭ
jefusan (User's profile) October 28, 2015, 3:11:31 PM
erinja (User's profile) October 28, 2015, 3:18:05 PM
Bemused (User's profile) October 28, 2015, 8:32:11 PM
erinja:I've never liked the melon. Looks like a 1)* rugby ball.2) Unimaginative gokart track with speed bumps in the wrong places
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* "1)" added to erinja original text.
Christa627 (User's profile) October 28, 2015, 10:54:17 PM
The green star shines for us all! But a watermelon doesn't shine at all.
lagtendisto (User's profile) October 29, 2015, 8:02:54 PM
jefusan:It's an interesting concept. Still, I can't help but wish this movement had better graphic designers.I also wonder what German Esperanto Association has in mind with this graphic design. I neither like mother earth peeled like potato nor it make sense to shadow earth.
Christa627 (User's profile) October 29, 2015, 8:25:55 PM
spreecamper:Yup. That's pretty weird looking!jefusan:It's an interesting concept. Still, I can't help but wish this movement had better graphic designers.I also wonder what German Esperanto Association has in mind with this graphic design. I neither like mother earth peeled like potato nor it make sense to shadow earth.