When I was young I had MAJOR issues with the old U.S.P.S. logo.
(google gave me an example here). I always thought it was some strange picture of a head or something looking to the left. I’m not kidding you. Either a very odd hat or a big nose. Just thought it was one of those odd things, a weird logo chosen for no good reason… Or that I was just young and didn’t get the meaning of it (like many things when I was 7) and knew it was on the “meh, whatever” scale of things and would eventually figure out the guy with the weird hat logo.
I think that is the exact scene I was remembering.
I don’t know why someone with “SDSAB” in their name should be so reluctant to compare that picture with the logo. Why turn a serious thread into yet another joke thread? Don’t we have separate forums for that?
Well, we have your “proof,” which coincidentally look alike, or we have it right out of Wikipedia’s mouth, as they say. The style is called Monobook, not MonoGreatWallofChina.
There is only a very approximate resemblance in form between the Wiki background and the Great Wall. The two images differ a great deal in detail when compared side by side. Your own image itself demonstrates very clearly and obviously that the that Wiki image is NOT that of the Great Wall.
I’ll admit that this picture is impressive. But please allow me to point out some problems with it:
First, you’re focusing on the left side, which is the part most people see, but it’s not the whole thing. Back in post #9, yabob gave us this link. Please click on it, and you will see the ENTIRE picture. Look towards the right side, and you’ll see that what appear to be rays of light are clearly edges of a page.
Second, take another look at your own picture: Between the “mountaintop” and the “rays of light”, we have a sort of border. It is a totally blank area, but it also has an edge to it. It isn’t merely that the light rays begin some distance from the mountaintop, but that there is some sort of clearly delineated object there. You can say that it is a cloud, but in my opinion, the edges are much too jagged. To me, it is much more plausible to say that this object is the little piece of tubular cloth which is often placed at the top and bottom of the binding of a hard-cover book. And the “mountaintop” itself is the empty space between the internal spine (where all the pages are folded and sewn) and the external cover (where the title and author are stamped and embossed).
I must be a clown, because I don’t see the great wall at all–not even close. I see the open spine of a book…
I thought is was folds of linen before opening the thread. Just some generic background image. I think it’s cool it’s a book.