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Did You Spot the Smile in the Coca-Cola Logo?
It started as a casual observation: someone noticed that the second “C” in the Coca-Cola logo looks like a smile. Once you see it, you can’t unsee it. Suddenly, the flowing curves of the iconic red-and-white Spencerian script seem to beam at you.

Experts agree: the second “C” resembles a subtle smile. Online, fans have noticed it too. Many describe the logo as radiating friendliness and joy. But is this a deliberate message from Coca-Cola—or just creative projection from viewers?
What People Are Seeing
Look closely at the vintage Coca-Cola wordmark. The letters flow in elegant cursive, but the second “C” in “Cola” stands out. Its top curve extends outward and then dips under, mimicking the curve of a smile.
If tilted slightly upward, it truly resembles a grin. Many viewers now sense warmth and friendliness in that curve, as if the logo is silently saying: “Hello, I’m smiling at you.” Some even call it a wink—a hidden gesture tucked in plain sight. Once you notice it, it becomes like spotting a face in the clouds.
The Historical Record
Here’s what we know:
- The Coca-Cola script originated in the late 1880s.
- Young bookkeeper Frank Mason Robinson designed the logo in Spencerian script, popular at the time.
- The flowing loops and curves were standard for formal scripts—not a secret branding tactic.
- Later additions, like the red background and “Dynamic Ribbon Device” in 1969, came decades after the wordmark.
Crucially, archives show no memo, designer note, or advertisement suggesting the second “C” was meant to be a smile. The “hidden grin” idea appears to be entirely modern.
Is the Smile Intentional?
Continue READING…
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