Fruit of the loom cornucopia
Fruit of the Loom is an
American manufacturer of underwear and other types of clothing that was founded
170 years ago. Their logo is a drawing of a red apple, leaves, green grapes,
currants, and purple grapes. However, many clearly remember the logo as having
an iconic cornucopia (horn of plenty) behind the fruits, but it has actually
never been there.
Considered to be one of the
strongest Mandela Effects, the Fruit of the Loom logo with a cornucopia is
referenced in many works, such as the cover of the 1973 album "Flute of
the Loom" by the American flautist Frank Wess, featuring a flute with a
cornucopia shape, the 2006 computer-animated movie The Ant Bully, with a
"Fruit of the Loin" logo with a giant cornucopia, and South Park
episode "I Should Have Never Gone Ziplining" (episode 6 of season 16,
aired on April 18, 2012), in which the logo of a "Cornucopia Brand"
is seen.
1.
What
year did Fruit of the Loom change their logo?
The most
notable thing about the Fruit of the Loom logo is probably the horn of plenty
controversy. While the brand’s website states the logo has never featured a
horn of plenty (cornucopia), many people have claimed the opposite.
Although this phenomenon could
be explained by the so-called Mandela effect, it is more likely a marketing
trick.
i.
Meaning and
history
In this article, we will stick
to the history of the logo introduced on the company’s official website.
The oldest logo on the list was
so detailed that it looked more like a painting. The still life depicted an
apple, green and blue grapes, and light berries in a pretty realistic manner.
The background alone would have
been impossible for a modern logo. It featured various shades of blue paired
with white, which resembled the clouds in the sky.
·
1927
The most notable alteration was
the shape of the logo – the rectangle was replaced by an ellipse. The fruits
were redrawn, although their positions and colours were preserved almost
unchanged. The banner disappeared leaving the word-mark written just over the
blue background.
·
1936
While the
previous two versions resembled painting, this one looked more like a seal. The
background adopted a noble gold shade, while the fruits had a pronounced 3D
touch.
·
1951
The design
was updated without changing its structure. The most notable alteration was the
background – it grew lighter, due to which the fruits grew more visible.
·
1962
The “seal”
was replaced by a white ellipse. The name of the brand grew larger and better
legible (although it was still far from being perfectly legible).
·
1978
While the
structure of the Fruit of the Loom logo preserved, the fruits lost the white
highlights. The writing “Fruit of the Loom” grew a little easier to read again.
·
2003
2. What year did Fruit of the Loom change their logo?
Fruit of
the Loom is has been around for over 200 years, and it owns one of the oldest
trademarks in US history. The company is the top seller of men’s underwear in
the US and one of the most recognised names in the world.
Fruit of the Loom logo
·
A Fruitful Enterprise
In 1851, brothers Benjamin and
Robert Knight bought a mill in Warwick, Rhode Island. Under the name B.B. and
R. Knight Corporation, they began making high-quality cotton cloth to sell to
textile manufacturers.
In 1870, the brothers registered
the name Fruit of the Loom for their company. It was trademark number 418, and
it is one of the oldest trademarks in the country.
· An Inspiring Visit
The name was inspired by a
visit to one of the mill’s customers, a cloth manufacturer named Rufus Skeel.
While he was at the Skeel factory, Robert discovered that Skeel’s daughter
Jessica painted fruits on some of the bolts of cloth. Skeel said the decorated
bolts sold more quickly than the others.
Ever since, Fruit of the Loom
has used apples and other fruit in its trademark. A loom is an old-fashioned
machine that was used to make thread and cloth. In choosing this name, the
Wrights were referring to cloth as the “fruit” or product of the loom.
·
The First Logo
In 1893, the company released
its first logo. It was an elegant logo in the style many companies used. It
showed a red apple, green grapes, currants and purple grapes.
Logo was a rectangular frame surrounding a
beautiful painting of the fruits set against a colorful sky. The company name
appeared in an arching label above the fruit. In 1927, the logo took on an oval
shape but kept the fruit painting.
In 1936, the company began
using a logo that looked more like a seal, and the fruits seemed to disappear.
The logo went through minor changes over the next decades until its major
overhaul in 1978.
·
An Underwear Innovator
In 1928, Fruit of the Loom
began licensing its name to makers of finished clothing products. One of them
was a clothing manufacturer named Joseph Goldfarb, who began selling Fruit of
the Loom products for the Union Underwear Company.
Goldfarb insisted he could
become profitable by offering high-quality underwear at a low price, and he was
right. By 1930, Goldfarb owned a factory in Kentucky that employed 650 people.
Goldfarb was a true underwear
innovator. In the 1940's, he pioneered the idea of selling boxer shorts in sets
of three. Today, this packaging is the industry standard for men’s underwear.
In the 1950's, he became the first underwear maker to advertise on television.
By the 1960's, Fruit of the Loom
was the most popular maker of men’s underwear. The company later expanded into
casual wear and women’s underwear.
·
The Fruit of the Loom
Guys
In 1975, the company launched
the well-known Fruit of the Loom Guys in its advertising. They wore fruit
costumes and raved about the comfort of Fruit of the Loom products. The “guys”
turned Fruit of the Loom into the most recognised underwear brand in the
country.
·
The Logo in the 1970's
In 1978, the logo went through
another big change.
In that year, the fruits
appeared above an oval seal with a black border, a white background and the
words “Fruit of the Loom” in black lettering. This was a crisp, striking look
that made the company name the centre of attention. This remained the basic
logo until recent years.
Today, the logo shows the
fruits in a simple, stamped design floating over the company name with no frame
and no border. The fruits are in bold, primary colours.
·
The Mandela Effect
The Fruit of the Loom logo has
another distinction. It’s a prime example of what social scientists call “the
Mandela effect.” This is the phenomenon of large numbers of people who insist
they remember something that never happened.
Writer Fiona Broome coined the
term in 2009. She was at a conference with a group of people who remembered
hearing about Nelson Mandela’s death in a South African prison in the 1980's.
These people shared detailed memories of the funeral and his widow’s speech.
When she got home from the
conference, however, she discovered Mandela was very much alive. He died in
2013. Broome began researching other instances of this phenomenon and
discovered it was more common than anyone might have guessed.
·
There Is No Horn
The Fruit of the Loom logo
frequently gets cited as an example of this effect. Many people insist the logo
has a cornucopia, and others swear they’ve seen earlier versions of the logo
with one. Some websites still post pictures of the logo with the “horn of
plenty,” insisting that it’s the correct one.
If they looked at their tee
shirt label, however, they’d see the truth. In reality, the Fruit of the Loom
logo has never had a cornucopia.
·
Fruit of the Tomb
In 2017, Fruit of the Loom sued
a Texas company named En Garde for selling a line of underwear and tee shirts
it called Fruit of the Tomb. It’s a clever name for clothing that has Gothic
and Halloween-related themes, but Fruit of the Loom thought the name infringed
on its trademark. Fruit of the Loom sued En Garde, but a court dismissed the
motion.
·
Fruits Are Here To Stay
Fruit of the Loom has been a
textile maker and an underwear innovator. Today, it is a global company that
employs more than 25,000 people worldwide. Its fruity logo is a well-known
symbol of comfort.












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