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Wikipedia

Smiley

A smiley, sometimes called a smiley face, is a basic ideogram representing a smiling face.[1][2] Since the 1950s, it has become part of popular culture worldwide, used either as a standalone ideogram or as a form of communication, such as emoticons. The smiley began as two dots and a line representing eyes and a mouth. More elaborate designs in the 1950s emerged, with noses, eyebrows, and outlines. New York radio station WMCA used a yellow and black design for its "Good Guys" campaign in the early 1960s.[3][4][5] More yellow-and-black designs appeared in the 1960s and 1970s, including works by Harvey Ross Ball in 1963,[6][5][7] and Franklin Loufrani in 1971.[8][9][10] Today, The Smiley Company founded by Franklin Loufrani claims to hold the rights to the smiley face in over 100 countries. It has become one of the top 100 licensing companies globally.

Example of a smiley face
An example of an emoticon smiley face (represented using a colon followed by a parenthesis) used in direct communication, as seen in this screenshot of an email.

There was a smile fad in 1971 in the United States.[11][12][4][13] The Associated Press (AP) reported in September 1971 that "two affiliated insurance companies" claimed credit for the symbol and Harvey Ball designed it; Bernard and Murray Spain claimed credit for introducing it to the market.[14] In October 1971[8] Loufrani trademarked his design in France while working as a journalist for France Soir.[8][15][16]

Today, the smiley face has evolved from an ideogram into a template for communication and use in written language. The internet smiley began with Scott Fahlman in the 1980s when he first theorized ASCII characters could be used to create faces and demonstrate emotion in text. Since then, Fahlman's designs have become digital pictograms known as emoticons.[17] They are loosely based on the ideograms designed in the 1960s and 1970s, continuing with the yellow and black design.

Terminology edit

 
The smiley face of Sabritas named Willie, having an open mouth.

The earliest known use of "smiley" as an adjective for "having a smile" or "smiling" in print was in 1848.[18][19] James Russell Lowell used the line "All kin' o' smily roun' the lips" in his poem The Courtin’.[20][21] According to the Merriam-Webster online dictionary the earliest known use of "smiley face" for "a line drawing of a smiling face" was in 1957.[1] In 1957 Jane McHenry wrote in a write-up, Do-It-Yourself Carnival "Tape a paper plate to the mop head for a face, arranging string strands on each side for the hair. Draw a big smiley face on the plate!"[22] A year later, there was an illustration of a noseless smiling face containing two dots, eyebrows, and a single curved line for a mouth in a write-up Galloping Ghosts! by Bill Ross with the text:

"Collect six empty pop bottles and six cone-shaped paper cups. With crayons draw smiley faces on three of the cups and scary ones on the others. Put a cup on top of each bottle and line them up as 'ghosts.'...Keep score by counting five points for each scary-faced ghost knocked over and, since it is a night for spooks, only one point for each smiley!"[23]

Early designs were often called "smiling face" or "happy face." In 1961 the WMCA's Good Guys, incorporated a black smiley onto a yellow sweatshirt,[24] and it was nicknamed the "happy face." The Spain brothers and Harvey Ross Ball both had designs in the 70s that concentrated more on slogans than the actual name of the smiley. When Ball's design was completed, it was not given an official name. It was however labeled as "The Smile Insurance Company" which appeared on the back of the badges he created. The label was due to the fact the badges were designed for commercial use for an insurance company. The Spain brothers used the slogan Have a nice day,[5][25] which is now frequently known for the slogan rather than the naming of the smiley.

The word smiley was used by Franklin Loufrani in France, when he registered his smiley design for trademark while working as a journalist for France Soir in 1971. The smiley accompanied positive news in the newspaper and eventually became the foundation for the licensing operation, The Smiley Company. [26]

Competing terms were used such as smiling face and happy face before consensus was reached on the term smiley.The name smiley became commonly used in the 1970s and 1980s as the yellow and black ideogram began to appear more in popular culture. The ideogram has since been used as a foundation to create emoticon emojis. These are digital interpretations of the smiley ideogram and have since become the most commonly used set of emojis since they adopted by Unicode in 2006 onwards. Smiley has since become a broader term that often includes both the ideogram design, but also emojis that use the same yellow and black design.

Ideogram history edit

Early history of smiling faces edit

For thousands of years, smiling faces have been used as ideograms and pictograms. The oldest known smiling face was found by a team of archaeologists led by Nicolò Marchetti of the University of Bologna. Marchetti and his team pieced together fragments of a Hittite pot from approximately 1700 BC found in Karkamış, Turkey. Once the pot had been pieced together, the team noticed that the item had a large smiling face engraved on it, becoming the first item with such a design to be found.[27]

The Danish poet and author Johannes V. Jensen was famous for experimenting with the form of his writing, amongst other things. In a letter sent to publisher Ernst Bojesen in December 1900, he includes both a happy and sad face. It was in the 1900s that the design evolved from a basic eye and mouth design into a more recognizable design.[28]

Another early commercial use of a smiling face was in 1922 when the Gregory Rubber Company of Akron, Ohio, ran an ad for "smiley face" balloons in The Billboard. This smiley face had hair, a nose, teeth, pie eyes, and triangles over the eyes.[29]

Ingmar Bergman's 1948 film Port of Call includes a scene where the unhappy Berit(played by Nine-Christine Jönsson[30]) draws a sad face – closely resembling the modern "frowny" but including a dot for the nose – in lipstick on her mirror before being interrupted.[31][15] In 1953 and 1958, similar happy faces were used in promotional campaigns for the films Lili (1953)[32] and Gigi (1958). In September 1963, there was the premiere[33] of The Funny Company, an American children's TV programmer, had a noseless Smiling face used as a kids' club logo; the closing credits ended with the message, "Keep Smiling!"[34][35][36][37]

The yellow and black happy face edit

In the latter half of the 20th century, the face now known as a smiley has evolved into a well-known symbol recognizable for its yellow and black features. The first known combination of yellow and black was used for a smiling face was in late 1962, when New York City radio station WMCA released a yellow sweatshirt as part of a marketing campaign.[38][39] By 1963, over 11,000 sweatshirts had been given away. They had featured in Billboard magazine and numerous celebrities had also been pictured wearing them, including actress Patsy King and Mick Jagger.[3][15] The radio station used the happy face as part of a competition for listeners. When the station called listeners, any listener who answered their phone "WMCA Good Guys!" was rewarded with a "WMCA good guys" sweatshirt that incorporated the yellow and black happy face into its design.[40][41][42] The features of the WMCA smiley was a yellow face, with black dots as eyes and had a slightly crooked smile. The outline of the face was also not smooth to give it more of a hand drawn look.[42] Originally, the yellow and black sweatshirt (sometimes referred to as gold), had WMCA Good Guys written on the front with no smiley face.[16][38]

 
"Authentic Worcester-made smiley face", by Harvey Ball

A number of United States–based designers created yellow and black happy faces over the next decade. In Worcester, Massachusetts, graphic designer Harvey Ross Ball created a happy face to raise the morale of the employees at the State Mutual Life Assurance Company.[43][7][16][44] Ball created the design in ten minutes and was paid $45 (equivalent to $448 in 2023). His rendition, with a bright yellow background, dark oval eyes, full smile, and creases at the sides of the mouth,[42] was imprinted on more than fifty million buttons and became familiar worldwide. The design is so simple that it is certain that similar versions were produced before 1963, including those cited above. However, Ball's rendition, as described here, has become the most iconic version.[41][5] In 1967, Seattle graphic artist George Tenagi drew his own version at the request of advertising agent, David Stern. Tenagi's design was used in a Seattle-based University Federal Savings & Loan advertising campaign.[45] Lee Adams's lyrics inspired the "Put on a Happy Face" ad campaign from the musical Bye Bye Birdie. Stern, the man behind this campaign, also incorporated the Happy Face in his run for Seattle mayor in 1993.[5] The Philadelphia-based brothers Bernard and Murray Spain also used the design on novelty items for their business, Traffic Stoppers. They focused on the slogan "Have a happy day,"[25][46] which mutated into "Have a nice day." As with Harvey Ball, they also produced happy face badges, producing over 50 million with New York button manufacturer NG Slater.[47][48][49]

Evolution into the smiley edit

In 1972, Frenchman Franklin Loufrani legally trademarked the use of a smiley face. He used it to highlight the good news parts of the newspaper France Soir. He simply called the design "Smiley" and launched The Smiley Company. In 1996 Loufrani's son Nicolas Loufrani took over the family business and built it into a multinational corporation. Nicolas Loufrani was outwardly skeptical of Harvey Ball's claim to creating the first smiley face. While noting that the design that his father came up with and Ball's design were nearly identical, Loufrani argued that the design is so simple that no one person can lay claim to having created it. As evidence for this, Loufrani's website points to early cave paintings found in France (dating from 2500 BC) that he claims are the first depictions of a smiley face. Loufrani also points to a 1960 radio ad campaign that reportedly made use of a similar design.[7][15]

The Smiley Company claims to own the rights to the Smiley trademark in one hundred countries.[50] Its subsidiary, SmileyWorld Ltd, in London, headed by Nicolas Loufrani, creates or approves all the Smiley products sold in countries where it holds the trademark.[26] The Smiley brand and logo have significant exposure through licensees in sectors such as clothing, home decoration, perfumery, plush, stationery, publishing, and through promotional campaigns.[51] The Smiley Company is one of the 100 top licensing companies in the world, with a turnover of US$167 million in 2012.[52] The first Smiley shop opened in London in the Boxpark shopping center in December 2011.[53] In 2022, there were many birthday celebrations for the smiley. Many of these came in the form of collaborations between The Smiley Company and large retailers, such as Nordstrom.[54]

Language and communication edit

The earliest known smiley-like image in a written document was drawn by a Slovak notary to indicate his satisfaction with the state of his town's municipal financial records in 1635.[55] The gold smiling face was drawn on the bottom of the legal document, appearing next to lawyer's Jan Ladislaides signature.[56]

A disputed early use of the smiley in a printed text may have been in Robert Herrick's poem To Fortune (1648),[57] which contains the line "Upon my ruins (smiling yet :)". Journalist Levi Stahl has suggested that this may have been an intentional "orthographic joke", while this occurrence is likely merely the colon placed inside parentheses rather than outside of them as is standard typographic practice today: "(smiling yet):". There are citations of similar punctuation in a non-humorous context, even within Herrick's own work.[58] It is likely that the parenthesis was added later by modern editors.[59]

On the Internet, the smiley has become a visual means of conveyance that uses images. The first known mention on the Internet was on 19 September 1982, when Scott Fahlman from Carnegie Mellon University wrote:


I propose that the following character sequence for joke markers:

 :-)

 Read it sideways. Actually, it is probably more economical to mark
 things that are NOT jokes, given current trends. For this, use

 :-(

[60][17]

Yellow graphical smileys have been used for many different purposes, including use in early 1980s video games. Yahoo! Messenger (from 1998) used smiley symbols in the user list next to each user, and also as an icon for the application. In November 2001, and later, smiley emojis inside the actual chat text was adopted by several chat systems, including Yahoo Messenger.

 
Smiley faces from DOS code page 437

The smiley is the printable version of characters 1 and 2 of (black-and-white versions of) codepage 437 (1981) of the first IBM PC and all subsequent PC compatible computers. For modern computers, all versions of Microsoft Windows after Windows 95[61] can use the smiley as part of Windows Glyph List 4, although some computer fonts miss some characters.[62]

The smiley face was included in Unicode's Miscellaneous Symbols from version 1.1 (1993).[63]

Unicode smiley characters:
U+263A Alt+1 White Smiling Face (This may appear as an emoji on some devices)
U+263B Alt+2 Black Smiling Face
Miscellaneous Symbols also contains the frowning face:
U+2639 White Frowning Face

Later additions to Unicode included a large number of variants expressing a range of human emotions, in particular with the addition of the "Emoticons" and "Supplemental Symbols and Pictographs blocks in Unicode versions 6.0 (2010) and 8.0 (2015), respectively. These were introduced for compatibility with the ad-hoc implementation of emoticons by Japanese telephone carriers in unused ranges of the Shift JIS standard. This resulted in a de facto standard in the range with lead bytes 0xF5 to 0xF9.[64]KDDI has gone much further than this, and has introduced hundreds more in the space with lead bytes 0xF3 and 0xF4.[65]

Symbolism in popular culture and applications edit

The smiley has now become synonymous with culture across the world. It is used for communication, imagery, branding, and topical purposes to display a range of emotions. In print, numerous brands used a yellow happy face to demonstrate happiness, beginning in the 1960s.

Pre-1970 advertising campaigns edit

Before many countries had licensing and/or trademark restrictions on the smiley, different designs were used sparingly in advertising campaigns in the early to mid 1900s. Much of this activity was centered on the Northeastern United States.[citation needed] One of the first known commercial uses of a smiling face was in 1919, when the Buffalo Steam Roller Company in Buffalo, New York, applied stickers on receipts with the word "thanks" and a smiling face above it. The face contained a lot of detail, having eyebrows, nose, teeth, chin, and facial creases reminiscent of "man-in-the-Moon" style characteristics.[66]

In print edit

Franklin Loufrani used the word smiley when he designed a smiling face for the newspaper he was working for at the time. The Loufrani design came in 1971, when Loufrani designed a smiley face for the newspaper, France-Soir. The newspaper used Loufrani's smiley to highlight stories that they defined as "feel-good news."[26] This particular smiley went onto form The Smiley Company. Mad magazine notably used the smiley a year later in 1972 across their entire front page for the April edition of the magazine. This was one of the first instances that the smiling face had been adapted, with one of the twenty visible smileys pulling a face.[67]

In the United States, there were many instances of smiling faces in the 1900s. However, the first industry to mass adopt the smiley was in comics and cartoons.

The logo for and cover of the omnibus edition of the Watchmen comic book series is a smiley badge, worn by the character the Comedian, with blood splattered on it from the murder which initiates the events of the story.

In the DC Comics, shady businessman "Boss Smiley" (a political boss with a smiley face for a head) makes several appearances.[68]

Music and film edit

As music genres began to create their own cultures from the 1970s onwards, many cultures began to incorporate a smiling face into their culture. In the late 1970s, the American band Dead Kennedys launched their first recording, "California über alles". The single cover was a collage aimed to look like that of a Nazi rally prior to World War II. It featured three of the vertical banners commonly used at such rallies, but with the usual swastikas replaced by large smileys.[69] In the UK, the happy face has been associated with psychedelic culture since Ubi Dwyer and the Windsor Free Festival in the 1970s and the electronic dance music culture, particularly with acid house, that emerged during the Second Summer of Love in the late 1980s. The association was cemented when the band Bomb the Bass used an extracted smiley from the comic book series Watchmen on the center of its "Beat Dis" hit single.

 
The Watchmen comic series logo

In addition to the movie adaptation of Watchmen, the film Suicide Squad has the character Deadshot staring into the window of a clothing store. Behind a line of mannequins is a yellow smiley face pin, which had been closely associated to another DC comic character, Comedian.[70] The 2001 film Evolution has a three-eyed smiley for its logo. It was later carried onto the movie's spin-off cartoon, Alienators: Evolution Continues.

In the film Forrest Gump it is implied the titular character inspired the smiley face design after wiping his face on a T-shirt while running coast to coast.

In the late-1980s, the smiley again became a prominent image within the music industry. It was adopted during the growth of acid house across Europe and the UK in the late 1980s. According to many, this began when DJ, Danny Rampling, used the smiley to celebrate Paul Oakenfold's birthday.[71] This sparked a movement where the smiley moved into various dance genres, becoming a symbol of 1980s dance music.[72]

In 2022, David Guetta collaborated with Felix Da Housecat and Kittin to release the song, Silver Screen, a reimagined version of the 2001 dance track. Guetta's version celebrated positivity and happiness.[73] The music video features a cameo from street artist, André Saraiva and portrays different groups portraying the message "Take The Time To Smile." The video partners that message with numerous smileys, on the side of buildings, on placards and on posters.

Physical products edit

Vittel announced in 2017 that they would be using the smiley on a special edition design of its water bottles. AdAge referred to its use as a "feel-good effect" and water bottles using the smiley icon had an 11.8% increase in sales, compared to the standard bottles, with 128 million bottles sold across Europe which featured the smiley-design.[74] In the UK, "Jammie Dodgers", a legendary biscuit line, incorporate the smiley engraved into circular cookies.

Art and fashion edit

As part of his early works, graffiti artist Banksy frequently used the smiley in his art. The first of his major works that included a smiley was his Flying Copper portrait, which was completed in 2004. It was during a period when Banksy experimented with working on canvas and paper portraits. He also used the smiley in 2005 to replace the face of the grim reaper. The image became known as "grin reaper."[75][76] In 2007, The Smiley Company partnered with Moschino for the campaign, "Smiley for Moschino."[77]

During the COVID-19 pandemic, fashion label Pull & Bear announced they would be releasing t-shirts with a smiley design incorporated on the front.[74] Other fashion labels that have used the smiley on their garments include H&M and Zara. The smiley has also featured on high-end fashion lines, including Fendi and Moncler.[78] High end French jeweller Valerie Messika produced white gold and yellow pendants, which contained a smiley face.[79]

For the 50th birthday of the Smiley, Galeries Lafayette in Paris, Beijing and Shanghai and 10 Nordstrom department stores sold limited edition smiley products to commemorate the anniversary.[80] During the same year, Lee Jeans announced the launch of a new clothing collection, Lee x Smiley.[81]

Gaming edit

In 1980, Namco released the now famous Pac-Man, a yellow faced cartoon character. In 2008, the video game Battlefield: Bad Company used the yellow smiley as part of its branding for the game. The smiley appeared throughout the game and also on the cover. The smiley normally appeared on the side of a grenade, which is something that became synonymous with the Battlefield series.[82]

The 1987 Atari ST game MIDI Maze, released on other platforms as Faceball 2000, features round, yellow Smileys as enemies. When a player is eliminated, these enemies taunt the player with the phrase "Have a nice day."

Events, business, and social sciences edit

During the London 2012 opening ceremony, early on in the show a number of giant yellow beach balls were released into the audience. Each had a large smiley face.[83] Walmart uses a smiley face as its mascot.[84] User experience researchers showed that the usage of smileys to represent measurement scales may ease the challenges related to translation and implementation for brief cross-cultural surveys.[85]

The Brooklyn Bridge had a smiley projected onto the base one evening in 2020. The smiley was part of a wider campaign by The Smiley Company to increase happiness for New Yorkers. The 82 feet wide projected smiley featured light pink lipstick on the mouth of the smiley.[86]

In 2022, Assouline published "50 Years of Good News," a breakdown of the cultural development of the smiley and its use.[87]

In 2022, the International Day of Happiness was celebrated by projecting a smiley onto a number of landmarks around the globe. In Seoul, South Korea, a smiley celebrating happiness was projected onto The Seoul Tower.[88]

Ownership and alternative smileys edit

In 1997, Franklin Loufrani attempted to trademark rights to the ideogram he created in the United States. Walmart contested his application, as it began using its "Rolling Back Prices" campaign a year prior. The fallout led to a 2002 court case, and a seven-year ongoing case.[89] The fallout resulted in Wal-Mart phasing out the use of the smiley in 2006.[90][91] Despite that, Walmart sued an online parodist for alleged "trademark infringement" after he used the symbol. The District Court found in favor of the parodist when in March 2008, the judge concluded that Walmart's smiley face logo was not shown to be "inherently distinctive" and that it "has failed to establish that the smiley face has acquired secondary meaning or that it is otherwise a protectable trademark" under U.S. law.[92][93][94] In June 2010, Walmart and The Smiley Company founded by Loufrani settled their 10-year-old dispute in front of the Chicago federal court. The terms remain confidential.[95][96] In 2016, Walmart brought back the smiley face on its website, social media profiles, and in selected stores.[97]

The band Nirvana created its own smiley design in 1991.[98] It was claimed that Kurt Cobain was the designer of the Nirvana smiley. Following his death, this claim was one of the reasons why it became so iconic. As recently as 2020, media reports suggested a Los Angeles–based freelance designer was in fact behind the designs.[98]

Fashion house Marc Jacobs designed a smiley in 2018, which had a yellow outline, with the letters M and J replacing the eyes. The mouth design was similar to the original Nirvana design. In January 2019, legal representatives of Nirvana announced they were suing Marc Jacobs for a breach of copyright.[99] Following the announcement by a judge in Los Angeles that the suit could move forward,[100] Marc Jacobs announced a countersuit against Nirvana.[101] In 2020, a Los Angeles–based designer suggested that he was the creator of the Nirvana smiley and therefore became an interjector in the case between Nirvana and Marc Jacobs.[102]

See also edit

References edit

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smiley, other, uses, disambiguation, several, terms, redirect, here, other, uses, face, disambiguation, happy, face, disambiguation, smiley, sometimes, called, smiley, face, basic, ideogram, representing, smiling, face, since, 1950s, become, part, popular, cul. For other uses see Smiley disambiguation Several terms redirect here For other uses see Smiley Face disambiguation and Happy face disambiguation A smiley sometimes called a smiley face is a basic ideogram representing a smiling face 1 2 Since the 1950s it has become part of popular culture worldwide used either as a standalone ideogram or as a form of communication such as emoticons The smiley began as two dots and a line representing eyes and a mouth More elaborate designs in the 1950s emerged with noses eyebrows and outlines New York radio station WMCA used a yellow and black design for its Good Guys campaign in the early 1960s 3 4 5 More yellow and black designs appeared in the 1960s and 1970s including works by Harvey Ross Ball in 1963 6 5 7 and Franklin Loufrani in 1971 8 9 10 Today The Smiley Company founded by Franklin Loufrani claims to hold the rights to the smiley face in over 100 countries It has become one of the top 100 licensing companies globally Example of a smiley faceAn example of an emoticon smiley face represented using a colon followed by a parenthesis used in direct communication as seen in this screenshot of an email There was a smile fad in 1971 in the United States 11 12 4 13 The Associated Press AP reported in September 1971 that two affiliated insurance companies claimed credit for the symbol and Harvey Ball designed it Bernard and Murray Spain claimed credit for introducing it to the market 14 In October 1971 8 Loufrani trademarked his design in France while working as a journalist for France Soir 8 15 16 Today the smiley face has evolved from an ideogram into a template for communication and use in written language The internet smiley began with Scott Fahlman in the 1980s when he first theorized ASCII characters could be used to create faces and demonstrate emotion in text Since then Fahlman s designs have become digital pictograms known as emoticons 17 They are loosely based on the ideograms designed in the 1960s and 1970s continuing with the yellow and black design Contents 1 Terminology 2 Ideogram history 2 1 Early history of smiling faces 2 2 The yellow and black happy face 2 3 Evolution into the smiley 3 Language and communication 4 Symbolism in popular culture and applications 4 1 Pre 1970 advertising campaigns 4 2 In print 4 3 Music and film 4 4 Physical products 4 5 Art and fashion 4 6 Gaming 4 7 Events business and social sciences 5 Ownership and alternative smileys 6 See also 7 ReferencesTerminology edit nbsp The smiley face of Sabritas named Willie having an open mouth The earliest known use of smiley as an adjective for having a smile or smiling in print was in 1848 18 19 James Russell Lowell used the line All kin o smily roun the lips in his poem The Courtin 20 21 According to the Merriam Webster online dictionary the earliest known use of smiley face for a line drawing of a smiling face was in 1957 1 In 1957 Jane McHenry wrote in a write up Do It Yourself Carnival Tape a paper plate to the mop head for a face arranging string strands on each side for the hair Draw a big smiley face on the plate 22 A year later there was an illustration of a noseless smiling face containing two dots eyebrows and a single curved line for a mouth in a write up Galloping Ghosts by Bill Ross with the text Collect six empty pop bottles and six cone shaped paper cups With crayons draw smiley faces on three of the cups and scary ones on the others Put a cup on top of each bottle and line them up as ghosts Keep score by counting five points for each scary faced ghost knocked over and since it is a night for spooks only one point for each smiley 23 Early designs were often called smiling face or happy face In 1961 the WMCA s Good Guys incorporated a black smiley onto a yellow sweatshirt 24 and it was nicknamed the happy face The Spain brothers and Harvey Ross Ball both had designs in the 70s that concentrated more on slogans than the actual name of the smiley When Ball s design was completed it was not given an official name It was however labeled as The Smile Insurance Company which appeared on the back of the badges he created The label was due to the fact the badges were designed for commercial use for an insurance company The Spain brothers used the slogan Have a nice day 5 25 which is now frequently known for the slogan rather than the naming of the smiley The word smiley was used by Franklin Loufrani in France when he registered his smiley design for trademark while working as a journalist for France Soir in 1971 The smiley accompanied positive news in the newspaper and eventually became the foundation for the licensing operation The Smiley Company 26 Competing terms were used such as smiling face and happy face before consensus was reached on the term smiley The name smiley became commonly used in the 1970s and 1980s as the yellow and black ideogram began to appear more in popular culture The ideogram has since been used as a foundation to create emoticon emojis These are digital interpretations of the smiley ideogram and have since become the most commonly used set of emojis since they adopted by Unicode in 2006 onwards Smiley has since become a broader term that often includes both the ideogram design but also emojis that use the same yellow and black design Ideogram history editEarly history of smiling faces edit For thousands of years smiling faces have been used as ideograms and pictograms The oldest known smiling face was found by a team of archaeologists led by Nicolo Marchetti of the University of Bologna Marchetti and his team pieced together fragments of a Hittite pot from approximately 1700 BC found in Karkamis Turkey Once the pot had been pieced together the team noticed that the item had a large smiling face engraved on it becoming the first item with such a design to be found 27 The Danish poet and author Johannes V Jensen was famous for experimenting with the form of his writing amongst other things In a letter sent to publisher Ernst Bojesen in December 1900 he includes both a happy and sad face It was in the 1900s that the design evolved from a basic eye and mouth design into a more recognizable design 28 Another early commercial use of a smiling face was in 1922 when the Gregory Rubber Company of Akron Ohio ran an ad for smiley face balloons in The Billboard This smiley face had hair a nose teeth pie eyes and triangles over the eyes 29 Ingmar Bergman s 1948 film Port of Call includes a scene where the unhappy Berit played by Nine Christine Jonsson 30 draws a sad face closely resembling the modern frowny but including a dot for the nose in lipstick on her mirror before being interrupted 31 15 In 1953 and 1958 similar happy faces were used in promotional campaigns for the films Lili 1953 32 and Gigi 1958 In September 1963 there was the premiere 33 of The Funny Company an American children s TV programmer had a noseless Smiling face used as a kids club logo the closing credits ended with the message Keep Smiling 34 35 36 37 nbsp Signature of Bernard Hennet Abbot of Zdar nad Sazavou Cistercian cloister in 1741 with smiley like drawing nbsp Illustrations from the 1920 novel Drawing for Beginners by Dorothy Furniss nbsp A smiley face balloon from a Gregory FUNNY B LOONS ad page 20 of The Billboard March 18 1922 page 20 nbsp A promotional poster for the film Lili published in the New York Herald Tribune in 1953 The yellow and black happy face edit In the latter half of the 20th century the face now known as a smiley has evolved into a well known symbol recognizable for its yellow and black features The first known combination of yellow and black was used for a smiling face was in late 1962 when New York City radio station WMCA released a yellow sweatshirt as part of a marketing campaign 38 39 By 1963 over 11 000 sweatshirts had been given away They had featured in Billboard magazine and numerous celebrities had also been pictured wearing them including actress Patsy King and Mick Jagger 3 15 The radio station used the happy face as part of a competition for listeners When the station called listeners any listener who answered their phone WMCA Good Guys was rewarded with a WMCA good guys sweatshirt that incorporated the yellow and black happy face into its design 40 41 42 The features of the WMCA smiley was a yellow face with black dots as eyes and had a slightly crooked smile The outline of the face was also not smooth to give it more of a hand drawn look 42 Originally the yellow and black sweatshirt sometimes referred to as gold had WMCA Good Guys written on the front with no smiley face 16 38 nbsp Authentic Worcester made smiley face by Harvey BallA number of United States based designers created yellow and black happy faces over the next decade In Worcester Massachusetts graphic designer Harvey Ross Ball created a happy face to raise the morale of the employees at the State Mutual Life Assurance Company 43 7 16 44 Ball created the design in ten minutes and was paid 45 equivalent to 448 in 2023 His rendition with a bright yellow background dark oval eyes full smile and creases at the sides of the mouth 42 was imprinted on more than fifty million buttons and became familiar worldwide The design is so simple that it is certain that similar versions were produced before 1963 including those cited above However Ball s rendition as described here has become the most iconic version 41 5 In 1967 Seattle graphic artist George Tenagi drew his own version at the request of advertising agent David Stern Tenagi s design was used in a Seattle based University Federal Savings amp Loan advertising campaign 45 Lee Adams s lyrics inspired the Put on a Happy Face ad campaign from the musical Bye Bye Birdie Stern the man behind this campaign also incorporated the Happy Face in his run for Seattle mayor in 1993 5 The Philadelphia based brothers Bernard and Murray Spain also used the design on novelty items for their business Traffic Stoppers They focused on the slogan Have a happy day 25 46 which mutated into Have a nice day As with Harvey Ball they also produced happy face badges producing over 50 million with New York button manufacturer NG Slater 47 48 49 Evolution into the smiley edit In 1972 Frenchman Franklin Loufrani legally trademarked the use of a smiley face He used it to highlight the good news parts of the newspaper France Soir He simply called the design Smiley and launched The Smiley Company In 1996 Loufrani s son Nicolas Loufrani took over the family business and built it into a multinational corporation Nicolas Loufrani was outwardly skeptical of Harvey Ball s claim to creating the first smiley face While noting that the design that his father came up with and Ball s design were nearly identical Loufrani argued that the design is so simple that no one person can lay claim to having created it As evidence for this Loufrani s website points to early cave paintings found in France dating from 2500 BC that he claims are the first depictions of a smiley face Loufrani also points to a 1960 radio ad campaign that reportedly made use of a similar design 7 15 The Smiley Company claims to own the rights to the Smiley trademark in one hundred countries 50 Its subsidiary SmileyWorld Ltd in London headed by Nicolas Loufrani creates or approves all the Smiley products sold in countries where it holds the trademark 26 The Smiley brand and logo have significant exposure through licensees in sectors such as clothing home decoration perfumery plush stationery publishing and through promotional campaigns 51 The Smiley Company is one of the 100 top licensing companies in the world with a turnover of US 167 million in 2012 52 The first Smiley shop opened in London in the Boxpark shopping center in December 2011 53 In 2022 there were many birthday celebrations for the smiley Many of these came in the form of collaborations between The Smiley Company and large retailers such as Nordstrom 54 Language and communication editMain article Emoticon The earliest known smiley like image in a written document was drawn by a Slovak notary to indicate his satisfaction with the state of his town s municipal financial records in 1635 55 The gold smiling face was drawn on the bottom of the legal document appearing next to lawyer s Jan Ladislaides signature 56 A disputed early use of the smiley in a printed text may have been in Robert Herrick s poem To Fortune 1648 57 which contains the line Upon my ruins smiling yet Journalist Levi Stahl has suggested that this may have been an intentional orthographic joke while this occurrence is likely merely the colon placed inside parentheses rather than outside of them as is standard typographic practice today smiling yet There are citations of similar punctuation in a non humorous context even within Herrick s own work 58 It is likely that the parenthesis was added later by modern editors 59 On the Internet the smiley has become a visual means of conveyance that uses images The first known mention on the Internet was on 19 September 1982 when Scott Fahlman from Carnegie Mellon University wrote I propose that the following character sequence for joke markers br br br br Read it sideways Actually it is probably more economical to mark br things that are NOT jokes given current trends For this use br br 60 17 Yellow graphical smileys have been used for many different purposes including use in early 1980s video games Yahoo Messenger from 1998 used smiley symbols in the user list next to each user and also as an icon for the application In November 2001 and later smiley emojis inside the actual chat text was adopted by several chat systems including Yahoo Messenger nbsp Smiley faces from DOS code page 437The smiley is the printable version of characters 1 and 2 of black and white versions of codepage 437 1981 of the first IBM PC and all subsequent PC compatible computers For modern computers all versions of Microsoft Windows after Windows 95 61 can use the smiley as part of Windows Glyph List 4 although some computer fonts miss some characters 62 The smiley face was included in Unicode s Miscellaneous Symbols from version 1 1 1993 63 Unicode smiley characters U 263A Alt 1 White Smiling Face This may appear as an emoji on some devices U 263B Alt 2 Black Smiling FaceMiscellaneous Symbols also contains the frowning face U 2639 White Frowning FaceLater additions to Unicode included a large number of variants expressing a range of human emotions in particular with the addition of the Emoticons and Supplemental Symbols and Pictographs blocks in Unicode versions 6 0 2010 and 8 0 2015 respectively These were introduced for compatibility with the ad hoc implementation of emoticons by Japanese telephone carriers in unused ranges of the Shift JIS standard This resulted in a de facto standard in the range with lead bytes 0xF5 to 0xF9 64 KDDI has gone much further than this and has introduced hundreds more in the space with lead bytes 0xF3 and 0xF4 65 Symbolism in popular culture and applications editThe smiley has now become synonymous with culture across the world It is used for communication imagery branding and topical purposes to display a range of emotions In print numerous brands used a yellow happy face to demonstrate happiness beginning in the 1960s Pre 1970 advertising campaigns edit Before many countries had licensing and or trademark restrictions on the smiley different designs were used sparingly in advertising campaigns in the early to mid 1900s Much of this activity was centered on the Northeastern United States citation needed One of the first known commercial uses of a smiling face was in 1919 when the Buffalo Steam Roller Company in Buffalo New York applied stickers on receipts with the word thanks and a smiling face above it The face contained a lot of detail having eyebrows nose teeth chin and facial creases reminiscent of man in the Moon style characteristics 66 In print edit Franklin Loufrani used the word smiley when he designed a smiling face for the newspaper he was working for at the time The Loufrani design came in 1971 when Loufrani designed a smiley face for the newspaper France Soir The newspaper used Loufrani s smiley to highlight stories that they defined as feel good news 26 This particular smiley went onto form The Smiley Company Mad magazine notably used the smiley a year later in 1972 across their entire front page for the April edition of the magazine This was one of the first instances that the smiling face had been adapted with one of the twenty visible smileys pulling a face 67 In the United States there were many instances of smiling faces in the 1900s However the first industry to mass adopt the smiley was in comics and cartoons The logo for and cover of the omnibus edition of the Watchmen comic book series is a smiley badge worn by the character the Comedian with blood splattered on it from the murder which initiates the events of the story In the DC Comics shady businessman Boss Smiley a political boss with a smiley face for a head makes several appearances 68 Music and film edit As music genres began to create their own cultures from the 1970s onwards many cultures began to incorporate a smiling face into their culture In the late 1970s the American band Dead Kennedys launched their first recording California uber alles The single cover was a collage aimed to look like that of a Nazi rally prior to World War II It featured three of the vertical banners commonly used at such rallies but with the usual swastikas replaced by large smileys 69 In the UK the happy face has been associated with psychedelic culture since Ubi Dwyer and the Windsor Free Festival in the 1970s and the electronic dance music culture particularly with acid house that emerged during the Second Summer of Love in the late 1980s The association was cemented when the band Bomb the Bass used an extracted smiley from the comic book series Watchmen on the center of its Beat Dis hit single nbsp The Watchmen comic series logoIn addition to the movie adaptation of Watchmen the film Suicide Squad has the character Deadshot staring into the window of a clothing store Behind a line of mannequins is a yellow smiley face pin which had been closely associated to another DC comic character Comedian 70 The 2001 film Evolution has a three eyed smiley for its logo It was later carried onto the movie s spin off cartoon Alienators Evolution Continues In the film Forrest Gump it is implied the titular character inspired the smiley face design after wiping his face on a T shirt while running coast to coast In the late 1980s the smiley again became a prominent image within the music industry It was adopted during the growth of acid house across Europe and the UK in the late 1980s According to many this began when DJ Danny Rampling used the smiley to celebrate Paul Oakenfold s birthday 71 This sparked a movement where the smiley moved into various dance genres becoming a symbol of 1980s dance music 72 In 2022 David Guetta collaborated with Felix Da Housecat and Kittin to release the song Silver Screen a reimagined version of the 2001 dance track Guetta s version celebrated positivity and happiness 73 The music video features a cameo from street artist Andre Saraiva and portrays different groups portraying the message Take The Time To Smile The video partners that message with numerous smileys on the side of buildings on placards and on posters Physical products edit Vittel announced in 2017 that they would be using the smiley on a special edition design of its water bottles AdAge referred to its use as a feel good effect and water bottles using the smiley icon had an 11 8 increase in sales compared to the standard bottles with 128 million bottles sold across Europe which featured the smiley design 74 In the UK Jammie Dodgers a legendary biscuit line incorporate the smiley engraved into circular cookies Art and fashion edit As part of his early works graffiti artist Banksy frequently used the smiley in his art The first of his major works that included a smiley was his Flying Copper portrait which was completed in 2004 It was during a period when Banksy experimented with working on canvas and paper portraits He also used the smiley in 2005 to replace the face of the grim reaper The image became known as grin reaper 75 76 In 2007 The Smiley Company partnered with Moschino for the campaign Smiley for Moschino 77 During the COVID 19 pandemic fashion label Pull amp Bear announced they would be releasing t shirts with a smiley design incorporated on the front 74 Other fashion labels that have used the smiley on their garments include H amp M and Zara The smiley has also featured on high end fashion lines including Fendi and Moncler 78 High end French jeweller Valerie Messika produced white gold and yellow pendants which contained a smiley face 79 For the 50th birthday of the Smiley Galeries Lafayette in Paris Beijing and Shanghai and 10 Nordstrom department stores sold limited edition smiley products to commemorate the anniversary 80 During the same year Lee Jeans announced the launch of a new clothing collection Lee x Smiley 81 Gaming edit In 1980 Namco released the now famous Pac Man a yellow faced cartoon character In 2008 the video game Battlefield Bad Company used the yellow smiley as part of its branding for the game The smiley appeared throughout the game and also on the cover The smiley normally appeared on the side of a grenade which is something that became synonymous with the Battlefield series 82 The 1987 Atari ST game MIDI Maze released on other platforms as Faceball 2000 features round yellow Smileys as enemies When a player is eliminated these enemies taunt the player with the phrase Have a nice day Events business and social sciences edit During the London 2012 opening ceremony early on in the show a number of giant yellow beach balls were released into the audience Each had a large smiley face 83 Walmart uses a smiley face as its mascot 84 User experience researchers showed that the usage of smileys to represent measurement scales may ease the challenges related to translation and implementation for brief cross cultural surveys 85 The Brooklyn Bridge had a smiley projected onto the base one evening in 2020 The smiley was part of a wider campaign by The Smiley Company to increase happiness for New Yorkers The 82 feet wide projected smiley featured light pink lipstick on the mouth of the smiley 86 In 2022 Assouline published 50 Years of Good News a breakdown of the cultural development of the smiley and its use 87 In 2022 the International Day of Happiness was celebrated by projecting a smiley onto a number of landmarks around the globe In Seoul South Korea a smiley celebrating happiness was projected onto The Seoul Tower 88 Ownership and alternative smileys editIn 1997 Franklin Loufrani attempted to trademark rights to the ideogram he created in the United States Walmart contested his application as it began using its Rolling Back Prices campaign a year prior The fallout led to a 2002 court case and a seven year ongoing case 89 The fallout resulted in Wal Mart phasing out the use of the smiley in 2006 90 91 Despite that Walmart sued an online parodist for alleged trademark infringement after he used the symbol The District Court found in favor of the parodist when in March 2008 the judge concluded that Walmart s smiley face logo was not shown to be inherently distinctive and that it has failed to establish that the smiley face has acquired secondary meaning or that it is otherwise a protectable trademark under U S law 92 93 94 In June 2010 Walmart and The Smiley Company founded by Loufrani settled their 10 year old dispute in front of the Chicago federal court The terms remain confidential 95 96 In 2016 Walmart brought back the smiley face on its website social media profiles and in selected stores 97 The band Nirvana created its own smiley design in 1991 98 It was claimed that Kurt Cobain was the designer of the Nirvana smiley Following his death this claim was one of the reasons why it became so iconic As recently as 2020 media reports suggested a Los Angeles based freelance designer was in fact behind the designs 98 Fashion house Marc Jacobs designed a smiley in 2018 which had a yellow outline with the letters M and J replacing the eyes The mouth design was similar to the original Nirvana design In January 2019 legal representatives of Nirvana announced they were suing Marc Jacobs for a breach of copyright 99 Following the announcement by a judge in Los Angeles that the suit could move forward 100 Marc Jacobs announced a countersuit against Nirvana 101 In 2020 a Los Angeles based designer suggested that he was the creator of the Nirvana smiley and therefore became an interjector in the case between Nirvana and Marc Jacobs 102 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Smiley category nbsp Look up Smiley or smiley in Wiktionary the free dictionary Acid2 Body language Emoji Emoticon Facial Action Coding System Galle Martian crater Henohenomoheji Kolobok Mr Yuk Pac Man character Pareidolia Red John Social intelligenceReferences edit a b Smiley face Merriam Webster com Dictionary Merriam Webster Smiley The Oxford dictionary of new words a popular guide to words in the news 1991 a b New York Good Guys show Billboard 20 July 1963 a b American fads by Richard A Johnson 1985 p 121 124 a b c d e Adams Cecil 23 April 1993 Who invented the smiley face The Straight Dope Retrieved 18 April 2011 Ethridge Mark Several Firms Claim to Be Originators of Smile Button Nashua Telegraph September 9 1971 a b c Stamp Jimmy 13 March 2013 Who really invented the Smiley face Washington DC Smithsonian Retrieved 29 May 2015 a b c Wal Mart fights to keep the smiley face Retail giant says symbol personifies its price reducing policy but London based firm says it secured rights years ago CNN Money 5 July 2006 Les marques francaises 150 ans de graphisme 1824 1974 French trademarks by Amiot Edith 1990 p 236 INPI Brand FR1199660 RENEWAL OF THE DEPOSIT MADE ON OCTOBER 1 1971 AT THE INPI No 120 846 AND REGISTERED UNDER No 832 277 Fad Is Sweeping Charlotte A Little Smile That s Going Places The Charlotte News Charlotte North Carolina Fri Jul 9 1971 Page 5 Retrieved 31 Jan 2024 LATEST NATIONAL FAD Smiling Faces Now Appear On Everything From Ear Screws To Blue Jeans Lubbock Avalanche Journal Lubbock Texas Fri Sep 3 1971 Page 80 part 1 and part 2 Retrieved 31 Jan 2024 Put On A Happy Face Time August 30 1971 Page 36 Nation in quest of symbol takes smile pin to heart Press Telegram Long Beach California Sat Sep 11 1971 Page 10 Retrieved 31 Jan 2024 a b c d History of smiley by The Smiley company by way of The Wayback Machine a b c Fifty years and 500m the happy business of the smiley symbol a b Smiley Lore cmu edu smiley the online Merriam Webster dictionary www merriam webster com Retrieved 16 June 2021 Online Etymology Dictionary Etymonline com Retrieved 2022 01 09 Clarendon Press 1989 smiley The Oxford English Dictionary Vol XV p 790 The Courtin By James Russell Lowell 1819 1891 Biglow Papers Retrieved 2022 03 18 Do It Yourself Carnival by Jane McHenry Vicksburg Evening Post Vicksburg Mississippi Sun Sep 8 1957 Page 38 Part of the syndicated Junior TREASURE Chest Edited by Marjorie Barrows Editor of The Children Hour Galloping Ghosts By Bill Ross The Tyler Courier Times Tyler Texas Sun Oct 26 1958 Page 64 Part of the syndicated Junior TREASURE Chest Edited by Marjorie Barrows Editor of The Children Hour Everybody s Putting on a Happy Face Asbury Park Press Asbury Park New Jersey Sun Jul 25 1971 Page 36 Retrieved 02 21 2024 a b Two Brothers Put The Smile On Buttons For Latest Fad By Nancy B Clarke Women s News Service The Daily Times News Burlington North Carolina Sun Aug 22 1971 Page 20 Retrieved 31 Jan 2024 a b c Golby Joel 24 January 2018 The Man Who Owns the Smiley Face Vice Borschel Dan Amanda 19 July 2017 History s oldest smile found on 4 000 year old pot in Turkey The Times of Israel Retrieved 28 July 2017 Johannes V Jensen var forst ude med smileyen The Gregory Rubber Co Toys ad on page 20 of The Billboard March 18 1922 commons wikimedia org Retrieved 16 June 2021 Port of Call IMDb Ingmarbergman se A still from the scene An early smiley in an ad for the movie LILI 1953 newspapers com Daily News New York New York Tue Mar 10 1953 Page 312 Premiere to Be Held at Highland Theatre Highland Park News Herald and Journal Los Angeles California Thu Sep 5 1963 Page 28 Savage Jon 20 February 2009 A design for life the Guardian Retrieved 5 January 2022 The Funny Company 1963 www youtube com Retrieved 27 February 2024 The Funny Company Inc US Trademark Registration Certificate No 764 727 Feb 11 1964 Ser No 164 341 file Mar 11 1963 First Use Jan 10 1963 First Use in Commerce Feb 13 1963 access date March 27 2022 Woolery George W 1983 Children s Television The First Thirty Five Years 1946 1981 Scarecrow Press pp 113 115 ISBN 0 8108 1557 5 Retrieved 19 March 2024 a b Focus on Deejay Scene Billboard 15 December 1962 p 34 I heart design significant graphic design selected by designers illustrators and critics Sooke Alastair 3 February 2012 Smiley s People Radio 4 The million dollar smile The Telegraph archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Loufrani points out that a smiley face was a key feature of a well known promotional campaign for a radio network on America s East Coast in the late Fifties a b Honan William H 14 April 2001 H R Ball 79 Ad Executive Credited With happy Face The New York Times Retrieved 29 August 2009 a b c Doug Lennox illustrated by Catriona Wight 2004 Now You Know More The Book of Answers vol 2 illustrated ed Dundurn p 50 ISBN 9781550025309 Button Helps Firms Gain Smile Image Small Business World 1966 09 Vol 3 Iss 9 page 1 A Grin That s Lasted 43 Years Smiley Face Got Its Start In Worcester part 1 and Smiley Grew With America s Search For Positives part 2 Hartford Courant Hartford Connecticut Fri Sep 29 2006 Pages D01 D05 Smiley face pin from University Federal Savings 1967 Museum of History and Industry Catalog of Copyright Entries 3D Ser Vol 25 Pts 7 11A by Library of Congress Copyright Office 1971 Peter Shapiro Smiling Faces Sometimes in The Wire issue 203 January 2001 pp 44 49 When You the Whole World With You The New York Times Oct 16 1971 The smile button It s Enough to Man Cry part 1 By Joseph M Treen Newsday Suffolk Edition Melville New York Mon Mar 20 1972 page 3 A and part 2 page 12 A Crampton Thomas 5 July 2006 Smiley Face Is Serious to Company The New York Times Smiley Licensing Company Profile by Licensing biz Archived from the original on 29 February 2012 Retrieved 14 March 2013 Global License Ranking the brands PDF Rankingthebrands com Retrieved 21 September 2018 Ivanauskas Giedrius 16 January 2012 Boxpark Shoreditch Interview with Nicolas Loufrani CEO of Smiley Made in Shoreditch A Magazine About Style Innovation Dining Nightlife and People in Shoreditch Made in Shoreditch Archived from the original on 7 March 2013 Retrieved 14 March 2013 Verdon Joan 4 March 2022 Nordstrom And Luxury Brands Help The Smiley Face Celebrate Its 50th Birthday Forbes Votruba Martin 17th century Emoji Slovak Studies Program University of Pittsburgh Archived from the original on 10 August 2018 Retrieved 4 March 2017 Ghosh Shreesha 6 February 2017 World s Oldest Emoji Discovered Scientists In Slovakia Say They Found Smiley Face Emoji International Business Times Madrigal Alexis C 14 April 2014 The First Emoticon May Have Appeared in 1648 The Atlantic Retrieved 15 April 2014 Emoticon Robert Herrick s 17th century poem To Fortune does not contain a smiley face Slate Magazine 15 April 2014 smileys emoticons typewriter art Text Patterns The New Atlantis Archived from the original on 28 February 2017 Retrieved 9 August 2014 Fahlman s original message Retrieved October 27 2013 WGL Assistant v1 1 The Multilingual Font Manager Archived from the original on 24 March 2008 Announcing WGL Assistant Announcement WGL Assistant V1 1 Beta available comp fonts 27 July 1999 Microsoft Typography News archive wikibooks Unicode Character reference 2000 2FFF Original Emoji from DoCoMo FileFormat info Original Emoji from KDDI FileFormat info van Den Berg Erik De smiley is niet stuk te krijgen de Volkskrant Front cover of Mad No 150 Mad April 1972 p 1 The True Story of The Smiley Face T shirt by Imri Merritt August 15 2022 Johnson Heather Dead Kennedys California Uber Alles Archived 2014 11 10 at the Wayback Machine Mix Online 1 October 2005 Steinberg Nick 10 August 2016 20 Hidden Details In Suicide Squad You May Have Missed Goliath Archived from the original on 24 September 2020 Retrieved 9 April 2020 The strange tangled history of the acid house smiley Red Bull 18 April 2018 Acid History How The Smiley Became The Iconic Face Of Rave ElectronicBeats magazine 5 January 2017 Crews Isaac 12 March 2022 David Guetta Joins Smiley s Campaign Of Positivity With An Exclusive Video Release For Upbeat Anthem Silver Screen Sounderground a b How Smiley s Defiant Optimism Helps Brands emerge from Darker Times AdAge June 2021 The Staying Power of the Smiley Face Artsy 15 August 2019 O Brien Jennifer Banksy to sell works at Art Source fair in Dublin The Times The Smiley Company s Evolution From Licensor to a 350m Lifestyle Brand Business of Fashion 15 March 2022 Gallagher Jacob 28 May 2019 The Shockingly Large Business Behind the Iconic Smiley Face The Wall Street Journal Baerd Elodie 21 February 2022 Joaillerie Messika celebre les 50 ans de Smiley avec le sourire in French Le Figaro Verdon Joan 4 March 2022 Nordstrom And Luxury Brands Help The Smiley Face Celebrate Its 50th Birthday Forbes Russell Jones John 9 March 2022 Lee Celebrates Smiley 50th Anniversary with new Collection MR magazine Hands on Battlefield Bad Company Wired 28 February 2008 Gunn Frank 28 July 2012 Spectators play with giant smiley face beach balls during the pre show for the Olympic Games Opening ceremonies in London on Friday July 27 2012 Vancouver Sun Archived from the original on 3 October 2020 Retrieved 9 April 2020 Why the Smiley Face A Chat with Walmart s CMO Corporate US The Wayback Machine 1 June 2016 Archived from the original on 28 February 2020 Retrieved 21 February 2024 Sedley Aaron Yang Yongwei 30 April 2020 Sha Mandy ed Scaling the Smileys A Multicountry Investigation Chapter 12 in The Essential Role of Language in Survey Research RTI Press doi 10 3768 rtipress bk 0023 2004 ISBN 978 1 934831 24 3 Giant smiley face projected onto Brooklyn Bridge to cheer up New Yorkers NY Post 28 July 2020 Seamons Helen 5 February 2022 We love Fashion fixes for the week ahead in pictures The Guardian 스마일리 보며 행복해져볼까 언박싱 in Korean The Korea Herald 21 March 2021 Wal Mart seeks smiley face rights BBC News 8 May 2006 Retrieved 9 May 2006 Kabel Mark 22 October 2006 Wal Mart phasing out smiley face vests Associated Press Williamson Richard 30 October 2006 The last days of Walmart s smiley face Adweek Smith v Wal Mart Stores Inc Citizen Vox 28 March 2008 The relevant text is in the Order granting summary judgment Timothy C Batten Sr ORDER 21 March 2008 section B Threshold Issue Trademark Ownership case 1 06 cv 00526 TCB document 103 pages 15 19 Smith v Wal Mart Stores Inc 537 FSupp2d 1302 March 20 2008 https h2o law harvard edu collages 14555 Archived 14 September 2022 at the Wayback Machine Smith v Wal Mart Stores Inc 537 FSupp2d 1302 March 20 2008 https www dmlp org sites citmedialaw org files 2008 03 20 Order 20Granting 20Summary 20Judgment pdf Sony Astellas Intel Apple Wal Mart Warner Intellectual Property Victoria Slind Flor 1 July 2011 Bloomberg The case is Loufrani v Wal Mart Stores Inc 1 09 cv 03062 U S District Court Northern District of Illinois Chicago Docket Entried and select Court filing Loufrani v Wal Mart Stores Inc 1 09 cv 03062 N D Ill CourtListener Smith Aaron 2 June 2016 Walmart s Smiley is back after 10 years and a lawsuit CNNMoney Retrieved 18 January 2017 a b Rosenbaum Claudia 23 September 2020 California Graphic Artist Claims He Not Kurt Cobain Created Nirvana s Smiley Face Logo Billboard Snapes Laura 3 January 2019 Nirvana sue designer Marc Jacobs over alleged copyright breach The Guardian Judge Allows Nirvana s Lawsuit Against Marc Jacobs to Proceed Rolling Stone 14 November 2019 Marc Jacobs countersues Nirvana in T shirt copyright dispute The Guardian 28 November 2019 Artist files lawsuit after claiming he came up with Nirvana s smily face logo NME 25 September 2020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Smiley amp oldid 1219019115, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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