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English: The British Rail 'double arrow' symbol and wordmark. The logo is coloured Flame Red, which is based on the definition in British Standard BS381C, where it is identified by the number 593 and the names Rail Red and Azo Orange. It is considered notoriously difficult to reproduce accurately on computer screens.
With the privatisation of the railways in the mid-1990s, the trademark registration for the logo was transferred to the Secretary of State for Transport.As British railway trains are now operated by a number of independent train operating companies, the double arrow logo no longer appears on railway vehicles except those preserved.
English: The British Rail 'double arrow' logo, in white with a Flame Red background. Flame Red is based on the definition in British Standard BS381C, where it is identified by the number 593 and the names Rail Red and Azo Orange. It is considered notoriously difficult to reproduce accurately on computer screens.
Tobyclifton redrew it according to the British Rail Corporate Identity Manual. This vector image includes elements that have been taken or adapted from this file: British Rail - colour reversed logo.svg .
English: The British Rail 'double arrow' logo, in Flame Red with a transparent background. Flame Red is based on the definition in British Standard BS381C, where it is identified by the number 593 and the names Rail Red and Azo Orange. It is considered notoriously difficult to reproduce accurately on computer screens.
This logo was created with a text editor. The 'double arrow' logo is a registered trade mark in the name of the The Secretary of State for Transport . Licensing
Front cover of the manual. The British Rail Corporate Identity Manual is a corporate identity guide created in 1965 by British Rail.It was conceived in 1964, and finished in July 1965 by British Rail's Design Research Unit, [1] and introduced British Rail's enduring double arrow logo, created by Gerald Barney and still in use today as the logo for National Rail. [2]
English: The logo for the Western Region of British Railways, using the British Rail 'double arrow' logo. Date: August 1978: Source: