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There are two widely used designs of a cornucopia-bearing Fruit of the Loom logo. Crucially, both of them were created as intentional fakes for the purpose of demonstrate the Mandela Effect.
If you remember walking into K-Mart with your mom as a kid to grab a value pack of Fruit of the Loom t-shirts with a cornucopia printed on the label, your memory would be slightly faulty.
Case in point: the great Fruit of the Loom logo mystery. Earlier in the week, the fact-checking website Snopes published a deep-dive investigation into whether or not Fruit of the Loom’s logo ...
Russell Monson, Prepear's co-founder and COO, says this is just "bullying" over a logo the company first filed to patent in 2017. "It is a very terrifying experience to be legally attacked by one ...
However, that is a fabrication, not the actual Fruit of the Loom logo. The perception of a cornucopia goes back decades. For example, a 1994 piece in a local Florida paper about the actor, Samuel ...
There are two widely used designs of a cornucopia-bearing Fruit of the Loom logo. Crucially, both of them were created as intentional fakes for the purpose of demonstrate the Mandela Effect.