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A collection of 150 exceptional text based logos to showcase different types and styles of logo designs that will be an inspiration for your own design projects
Hightlites include:
Nizwa Friday Souk
Bahla Fort
Beehive Tombs near Ibri
Ibri
Texting is not only a distraction from other, possibly more important things, but in the long run you get a double chin from it - of that I am convinced.
You can send a text message to certain buoys in the Great Lakes to get reports on weather and water conditions.
On the morning of April 15, 1946, in the closing days of World War II, a Grumman TBF Avenger, assigned to the carrier USS Makassar Strait, was shot down off the coast of Ishigaki Island by the Imperial Japanese Navy. The three aviators parachuted in to the water near Ohama, and swam to a coral reef, where they were captured by Japanese sailors. After being interrogated and tortured, they were executed during the night at the feet of Mount Banna, at the Imperial Navy Headquarters. The torture of prisoners of war was a violation of the Geneva Convention, the rules of war signed by the international community in 1929. Vernon L. Tebo and Robert Tuggle, Jr. were beheaded. Waren H. Loyd was beaten and stabbed with bayonets by numerous numbers of sailors and soldiers. This incident was a tragedy which took place during war.
Lt. Vernon L. Tebo, 28, a Navy pilot, of Illinois
Aviation Radioman 1st Class Warren H. Loyd, 24, of Kansas
Aviation Ordinanceman 1st Class Robert Tuggle, Jr., 20, of Texas
To console the spirits of the three fallen American servicemembers and to honor their deaths, we jointly dedicate this monument in the hope that this memorial stone will contribute to the everlasting peace and friendship between Japan and the United States, and that this monument will serve as a cornerstone to convey to future generations our keen desire for eternal peace in the world and our determination to renounce war.
August 15, 2001
The Joint Committee of Japanese and American Citizens to Honor the Three Fallen American Servicemembers During World War II
Walk.
As the people who adore you stop adoring you, as they die, as they move on, as you shed them, as you shed your beauty, your youth, as the world forgets you, as you recognise your transience, as you begin to lose your characteristics one by one, as you learn there is no-one watching you and there never was, you think only about driving - not coming from any place, not arriving at any place, just driving, counting off time. Now you are here, at 7:43. Now you are here, at 7:44. Now you are...
Gone.
Now it is waiting and nobody cares. And when your wait is over this room will still exist and it will continue to hold shoes and dresses and boxes and maybe someday another waiting person. And maybe not. The room doesn't care either.
It's always fascinating to find artefacts like this, they are like faint signals from the "other side" of the publishing process.
Article on the Children's Bureau 50th Anniversary. Source of photo in newspaper was U.S. Children's Bureau.
Text: Ends Child Doom - President William Howard Taft signed the Act creating the Children's Bureau on April 9, 1912. During past 50 years, the Act signed by Taft has diminished inhumane industrial practices and has led to a dramatic decrease in infant mortality and an end to Child Labor in sweatshops, mines and fields at slave wages. The Bureau had a staff of 16 and a budget of $25,000 a year when it began under Julia Lathrop.
Photo Credit: Maternal and Child Health Library in Georgetown
DAVID BUCKLAND
UK
Ice Texts
2005
video, 40 minutes
The artist writes, “Filming the demise of an iceberg is both exhilarating and sad. As we watch it sink lower and lower, and finally collapse, our reflections turn towards the implication of the loss of ice.”
This is my wife's HTC EVO smartphone. Next to one particular dog of ours who likes to be, shall we say, vocal, it's one of the noisiest things in the house given all of the email, text messages, voice mails, and phone calls that come into it. Since I wasn't allowed to use a dog model for this one, I chose the phone for today's Daily Shoot challenge:
Make a photograph illustrating a sound that catches your ear today.
Strobist: Canon 430EX, 1/8 power, snooted, camera right, bouncing off of a white foam board that's to the left and angled over the top of the phone. A piece of aluminum foil is out of the frame to the right, and slightly behind the phone to pick up some bounce off of the board and provide a bit of separation. The phone is sitting on a piece of clear (but apparently dirty) plexiglass that's on a black tabletop. Strobe triggered with Cactus remote.