It often starts with something small: “a throwaway comment or a second glance you wouldn’t normally give much thought to.” Nothing seems important at first, until your perception quietly shifts.
Then everything changes. “A shape you’ve seen your entire life suddenly looks different.” A curve that once felt neutral now seems expressive, almost alive, “as if the logo itself is quietly smiling back at you.” Once that idea forms, it’s hard to unsee it.
After someone points it out, the illusion settles in. “What was once just lettering now carries personality.” The curve feels “warm, welcoming, and oddly human.” Each time you see it again, it feels personal, even responsive. “The design hasn’t moved an inch—but your relationship with it has.”
In reality, the logo is old—more than a century—and came from a time when designers cared about “elegance, balance, and legibility.” There’s no proof it was meant to look like a face. It wasn’t symbolism or psychology, just solid design that lasted.
What truly changes is us. The brain is wired to spot patterns, especially faces and emotions. We see meaning where none was intended, just like animals in clouds. Mixed with memory, comfort, and tradition, the design begins to feel alive. That curve turns into a smile simply because “we want it to be one.”