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  1. The logo's upper half featured different icons that represented topics the head was "thinking of" (such as a beaker to reflect science, or flowers to reflect springtime). Hundreds of different "toppers" were designed for the logo. For its first few years, Noggin often captioned its logo with the slogan "What sparks you?"

    • Paramount Streaming ( Paramount Global )
  2. Noggin launched on February 2, 1999 as a joint-venture between MTV Networks (the owners of Nickelodeon) and the Children's Television Workshop (now Sesame Workshop). The logo was created by Big Blue Dot. Like its sister channel Nickelodeon, it could take many shapes and colors. The bottom half...

  3. List of Noggin logos. This page is a gallery of every variant of the Noggin logo. The logo was created as a "flexi-logo" that could feature a wide variety of different symbols on the top, reflecting what the Noggin head is thinking about. When Noggin was first launched, it was co-owned and operated by both Nickelodeon and Sesame Workshop ...

  4. Oct 28, 2017 · Requested by Lukas PoplinLadies and gentlemen, the moment you've all been waiting for! Presenting Nick Jr./Noggin Logo History (1997-present)!Like what you s...

    • 8 min
    • 2.5M
    • ITB ITB
    • Overview
    • Description
    • 2019 app logo
    • Notes

    The Noggin Logo, also known as the Noggin Face or just Noggin, is the most iconic element of the Noggin brand. It was used for the Noggin channel throughout its entire run. It was also used for Noggin.com and the Noggin mobile app until 2019, when the logo was discontinued after 20 years. Since 2019, the logo has been a purple "noggin" wordmark in lowercase letters.

    The logo was designed by Big Blue Dot in Watertown, Massachusetts. The first sketches of the logo were by Mark S. Fisher.

    The original Noggin logo has three parts. There is always a smiling face at the bottom and a bar with the word "NOGGIN" in the middle. The top element changes into an endless variety of different symbols to represent what the head is thinking about. There were hundreds of these symbols, called "toppers," made for the brand.

    The Noggin logo appeared in a huge amount of original animations, commercials, and network IDs for the channel. It was often animated as a character of its own, interacting with things and reacting to its different topper symbols.

    Noggin describes the logo as:

    The original Noggin logo has three parts. There is always a smiling face at the bottom and a bar with the word "NOGGIN" in the middle. The top element changes into an endless variety of different symbols to represent what the head is thinking about. There were hundreds of these symbols, called "toppers," made for the brand.

    When Nickelodeon launched the Noggin mobile app in 2015, it brought back the original three-part logo. The logo appeared all throughout the app and in different promotions from 2015 to 2019. However, on June 14, 2019, the app was redesigned and the logo was replaced. The app's new logo is a purple wordmark, reading "noggin" in lowercase.

    Since the 2019 logo is only used for the app and was never used during the run of the Noggin TV channel, it's not considered the primary logo.

    •The logo is similar to Nickelodeon's older splat logo. Both logos were "flexible" and changed into a wide variety of symbols to represent different things.

    •According to a Kidscreen article from 1999, there were a few scrapped ideas for a logo before the face was chosen. One of these was a gloved hand snapping its fingers.

  5. Feb 2, 1999 · All elements of the Noggin Original logo indicate the entertainment nature of this online service. At the same time, the cartoon style hints that the content is intended for children and teenagers. The modern emblem differs from all previous ones by the absence of the famous head with “ideas.”

  6. In 2019, the streaming service went through a major overhaul, and the classic Noggin logo was dropped for the first time. It was replaced by a simple lowercase logo. Moose and Zee were phased out as the app's guiding hosts, and all of the older programs were removed by 2020.

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