Re: Elky Logo
Reply #15 –
Xarcell,
Thank you for the work on it! That's a surprising Elk, very elegant, and abstract.
Just to note, the spelling we use is ElkArte.
LOL @ Ant.
Thank yer! So, say, Elk looks fat in your view, huh? I understand Feature Cat, but Elk is much leaner and cleaner than that cat-thing. It ain't like that.
Re: Elky Logo
Reply #18 –
I'm totally open to font ideas for it, but I agree on the good direction. It'll make people happy. This is not a bad thing.
Re: Elky Logo
Reply #21 –
Thats certainly not an elk lol. Elegant symbol no doubt..but still think humour is a better way.
What do we know about the elk animal? long face/head, a bit more fisty than moose and king of the forest of course. There's a few pointers there I think.
Re: Elky Logo
Reply #24 –
It doesn't matter to me, but it was discussed in another topic that the american "elk" is what we are using. If I am mistaken, someone please correct me. I know Nao said that he thought "Elkarte" represented an "Elk tree" & "Art". I always read it as "El Karte", which I thought was some other language...
Re: Elky Logo
Reply #27 –
Elkarte is Basque for "community". It's obviously European, although not Indo-European. However, it has absolutely nothing to do with either elks or mooses, however you care to define such critters.
It started being called Elk just for fun and because it was shorter. This then led to pictures of critters with antlers and stuff. Me, I'm happy with the green moose, and I don't mind if that annoys the Yanks. Having a moose will probably annoy some Basques too, since they'll be wondering what these silly mugs are doing wth their word, which has nothing to do with either elks or mooses, or any other ruminants of the antlered variety. You can't please everyone all the time.
Anyway, the funny green moose is fun. The funny penguin works for Linux, and they have managed to create a good professional reputation for their software. They could do this because the software was good enough for the job.
Re: Elky Logo
Reply #29 –
Yeah I know, but it's fun. AFAIK it's not being used by any particular project, and it's an open source image, and nobody else has a green one.
Anyway, the main point was that there's no need to get hung up over one person's definition of what an elk is.