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Highway Gothic. The Standard Alphabets For Traffic Control Devices, (also known as the FHWA Series fonts and unofficially as Highway Gothic), is a sans-serif typeface developed by the United States Federal Highway Administration (FHWA). The font is used for road signage in the United States and many other countries around the world.
Futura is a geometric sans-serif typeface designed by Paul Renner and released in 1927. [1] It was designed as a contribution on the New Frankfurt-project.It is based on geometric shapes, especially the circle, similar in spirit to the Bauhaus design style of the period.
The Steelers (then known as the Pittsburgh Pirates) first logo was the city coat of arms. Current logo of the Steelers. The Steelers have had several logos in the early part of their history, among them including the crest of Pittsburgh, a football with Pittsburgh's then-smoggy skyline, as well as a construction worker hanging onto a chain holding a pennant.
This season the blue jersey became the Giants standard home jersey. Appearing on the Giants' helmets for the first time in 1957 were the players' uniform numbers. The two digits, in a small white Futura font, were placed to the left and right of the red center stripe on the back of the helmet in 1957, and at both the front and back of the ...
The early years (1946–1963) The 49ers changed uniform designs and color combinations quite often in their first eighteen years of existence. From the team's inception in 1946 through the early 1960s, the San Francisco 49ers usually wore red, white or silver helmets, white or light-gray pants, and cardinal red (home) and white (road) jerseys.
2015 – The Browns drastically redesigned their jerseys, featuring updated sleeve and pant stripes, modernized font and increased use of orange. Changes include the addition of the team name below the stripes on each side of the pants, the addition of the city name on the chest above the uniform numbers, and orange numbers on the brown and ...
Since the mid-1990s, however, several teams have shifted away from the block numbers in favor of numbers that match a specific team font (e.g. Denver Broncos, Baltimore Ravens, Philadelphia Eagles, etc.) or in the case of the Pittsburgh Steelers, match the jersey number font with the helmet numbers while otherwise leaving the jersey design alone.
A 2019 redesign saw the team revert to green helmets and reincorporate black into the color scheme, along with a new medium shade of green that the franchise called "Gotham Green," modified primary and secondary logos, tapered striping on the jerseys and pants, a new sans-serif numeral font, a chest wordmark, and for the first time in team ...