Hello All and Happy Monday! 😊
Did you ever wonder where the smiley face came from?
The concept of a smiley face—two dots for eyes and an upturned line for a mouth—has a surprisingly ancient history. Historians have found symbols resembling smiley faces dating back about 3,700 years, such as markings on a Hittite jug from around 1700 BC near the Turky-Syria border. These early examples show that the basic idea of representing a happy face graphically is very old.
The modern smiley face as we recognize it today—a bright yellow circle with two oval eyes and a creased, off-center smile—was created in 1963 by graphic designer Harvey Ball. He was commissioned by the State Mutual Life Assurance Company in Worcester, Massachusetts, to create a symbol to boost employee morale. Ball was paid \$45 for this design, which quickly became popular but was never trademarked by him or the company.
Because the design was not copyrighted, many companies began producing their own versions of the smiley face in the 1970s, turning it into a widely recognized commercial icon. Over the decades, it evolved from a simple morale booster into a symbol of optimism, pop culture, and even rave culture in the 1990s.
In the 1980s, the smiley face concept was adapted for digital communication by computer scientist Scott Fahlman, who proposed using ASCII characters to create emoticons like :-) to express emotions in text. This innovation laid the groundwork for the emoticons and emojis widely used today.
So while smiley-like symbols have existed for thousands of years, the iconic yellow smiley face was first created in 1963 by Harvey Ball for an insurance company in Massachusetts. It later became a global symbol of happiness and optimism, evolving into digital emoticons in the 1980s.
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