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The first Google Doodle, on August 30, 1998, which celebrated Burning Man. A Google Doodle is a special, temporary alteration of the logo on Google's homepages intended to commemorate holidays, events, achievements, and historical figures.
The colorless Google logo used prior to September 2015, when a background image/doodle is set on the home page The colorless Google logo used for the funeral of George H. W. Bush on December 8, 2018 and the death of Queen Elizabeth II on September 8, 2022, as well as for Memorial Day starting in May 2019
Ruth Kedar (Hebrew: רות קדר; born 27 January 1955) is a Brazilian-born artist and designer, best known for designing the Google logo that was displayed from May 31, 1999 to September 1, 2015. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Larry Page and Sergey Brin were looking at designers to design their logo and website and Kedar was asked to present them with ...
"google doodles" will result in showing a random playable Google Doodle and also show an archive of other playable Doodles. [citation needed] "google logo history" results in a slideshow of the changes to the Google logo, starting with the logo used today and ending with one of the first logos from 1998. [97]
The theme for 2011 Doodle 4 Google competition is 'India's gift to the world'. The Children were requested to imagine their own version of the Google logo based on this theme. Varsha Gupta won this year's Doodle 4 Google competition. [22] The top doodles in India entered an online vote on the Doodle 4 Google website.
His first logo design for Google was in honor of Bastille Day, [2] on July 14, 2000, at the request of Page and Brin, [5] and he went on to design a great many specialty logos. By 2005, he was creating about 50 Google logos each year. [6] Hwang has designed Google logos commemorating Thanksgiving, Christmas, and other events such as Piet ...
Subsequent Google Doodles were designed by an outside contractor, until Larry and Sergey asked then-intern Dennis Hwang to design a logo for Bastille Day in 2000. From that point onward, Doodles have been organized and created by a team of employees termed "Doodlers". [240] Google has a tradition of creating April Fools' Day jokes.
For the weekend of May 21–23, 2010, Google changed the logo on its homepage to a playable version of the game [202] in recognition of the 30th anniversary of the game's release. The Google Doodle version of Pac-Man was estimated to have been played by more than 1 billion people worldwide in 2010, [203] so Google later gave the game its own ...