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- Words crossing or totem ambigram "Hot dog", vertical axis reflection symmetry. (en)
- Handmade ambigram in tattoo "New York / Rich Man", right side up and upside down. (en)
- Ambigram "Magic / Dream", with a handheld pattern giving a reversed shadow. (en)
- Ambigram "¡OHO!" with reversible faces by Rex Whistler created before 1944. A young woman transforms into a grandmother. (en)
- "Love Hate" sculpture in Munich, Germany, in 2020. (en)
- "incredible!" Magical ambigram. (en)
- Calligraphic color-reversal ambigram Soul of Laos, published in the book Ambigrams Revealed. (en)
- Ambigram 곰 / 문 , 180° rotational symmetry. (en)
- Another frame. (en)
- Calligraphic design Danke and half-turn ambigram. (en)
- Ambigram "¡OHO!" published by Rex Whistler in 1946. (en)
- "Now / Won" installation in front of the Reichstag building, Berlin, Germany, 2017. (en)
- Mirror ambigram tattoos on wrists "Love / Eros". (en)
- Nissin ambigram visual identity . (en)
- The word "বাংলা" , half-turn ambigram. (en)
- The Alabama A&M University has a totem mirror ambigram logo. (en)
- Ambigram tattoo Texas / Sexy, 180° rotational symmetry. (en)
- Rio 2016 , half-turn rotational ambigram logo containing letters and digits. (en)
- Oslo Climbing Club official logo "" 90° rotational ambigram showing a human silhouette vertically. (en)
- Although not totally symmetrical, the Sochi 2014 (Olympic games) official logo offers mirror and rotational symmetries, linking the numbers to the letters like an ambigram. (en)
- The online two-sided marketplace for residential cleaning Handy has a 180° rotational ambigram logo. (en)
- Ambigrams in comics The Upside Downs of Little Lady Lovekins and Old Man Muffaroo by Gustave Verbeek containing ambigram sentences in 1904. (en)
- Sun logo designed by Vaughan Pratt in 1982, chain ambigram, spinonym, 90° and 180° rotational symmetries. (en)
- The rotational logo New Man created by Raymond Loewy in 1968 is a natural ambigram. (en)
- Reflective calligram hat in Alevism forming a human face with Arabic letters. (en)
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- Seeking the balance point of analogies is an aesthetic exercise closely related to the aesthetically pleasing activity of doing ambigrams, where shapes must be concocted that are poised exactly at the midpoint between two interpretations. But seeking the balance point is far more than just aesthetic play; it probes the very core of how people perceive abstractions, and it does so without their even knowing it. It is a crucial aspect of Copycat research. (en)
- An ambigram is a visual pun of a special kind: a calligraphic design having two or more interpretations as written words. One can voluntarily jump back and forth between the rival readings usually by shifting one's physical point of view but sometimes by simply altering one's perceptual bias towards a design . Sometimes the readings will say identical things, sometimes they will say different things. (en)
- Rotation ambigrams are the most common type of ambigrams for good reason. When a word is turned upside down, the top halves of the letters turn into the bottom halves.
And because our eyes pay attention primarily to the top halves of letters when we read, that means that you can essentially chop off the top half of a word, turn it upside down, and glue it to itself to make an ambigram. [...] (en)
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