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Totem station names.
On Jan 28, 9:03*am, wrote:
On Jan 28, 3:39 pm, Mizter T wrote: possibly be seen as a stylised version of the railway bogie, the circle being a wheel and the bar being the side frame of the bogie? Coupling rod and wheel ? Although a steam coupling rod would hardly be an inspiration to an electric railway. IMHO The circle represents a tunnel. The bar represents a RoW. |
Totem station names.
On 28 Jan, 19:22, 1506 wrote: On Jan 28, 9:03*am, wrote: On Jan 28, 3:39 pm, Mizter T wrote: possibly be seen as a stylised version of the railway bogie, the circle being a wheel and the bar being the side frame of the bogie? Coupling rod and wheel ? Although a steam coupling rod would hardly be an inspiration to an electric railway. IMHO The circle represents a tunnel. *The bar represents a RoW. Of course the beauty of stylised symbols is that they can represent all of these things. My comments were specifically in relation to how the original 'bar and circle' device, which was used on station nameboards from 1908, came to be - it can be seen here on the platform of Dover Street station: http://www.ltmcollection.org/roundel...large=i000020h Looking at it again I can also imagine the bar as representing a railway carriage. As I said, it can represent whatever you wish to read into it. I dare say there's always the possibility that we're all looking at it in too narrow a manner, i.e. from the perspective of transport. It might be instructive to look at other examples of contemporary 'graphic design' (though it wasn't called that) from around the same time, for example advertising and packaging, and also to spread to net wider and look at other insignia, for example that derived from the military. Then again, perhaps the bar and circle' device was simply hit upon as an effective way of making the station's nameboard from stand out from the surrounding profusion of advertising (the circle was red, the bar blue). Those who are minded to complain about being exposed to a glut of commercial promotion when travelling by public transport might wish to bear in mind the possibility that one of the great symbols of public transport, the roundel, may simply have emerged almost by accident from the midst of a melee of advertisements. |
Totem station names.
The circle represents a far-china. The horizontal line is a tinkle-
tonkle-tinkle-tankle-too. |
Totem station names.
On 28 Jan, 20:23, Mizter T wrote:
snip Of course the beauty of stylised symbols is that they can represent all of these things. My comments were specifically in relation to how the original 'bar and circle' device, which was used on station nameboards from 1908, came to be - it can be seen here on the platform of Dover Street station:http://www.ltmcollection.org/roundel...ory.html?IXpag... Looking at it again I can also imagine the bar as representing a railway carriage. As I said, it can represent whatever you wish to read into it. I dare say there's always the possibility that we're all looking at it in too narrow a manner, i.e. from the perspective of transport. It might be instructive to look at other examples of contemporary 'graphic design' (though it wasn't called that) from around the same time, for example advertising and packaging, and also to spread to net wider and look at other insignia, for example that derived from the military. The problem can be with a logo that too many things can be read in it, so it becomes meaningless, for example the Tyneside (later Tyne & Wear) PTE logo was described as "an indescribable thing with the Tyne running through the middle" and the Greater Glasgow PTE one as "two broken coat hangers", and to some the London Country logo (now adapted bby Carousel, High Wycombe) has been described as a flying polo mint, a gun carriage and various other things... In contrast NBCs arrow formed out of a letter N and its shadow was rather neat. |
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