Recycling symbol

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The universal recycling symbol (U+2672 UNIVERSAL RECYCLING SYMBOL or U+267B BLACK UNIVERSAL RECYCLING SYMBOL in Unicode) is a symbol consisting of three chasing arrows folded in a Möbius strip. It is an internationally recognized symbol for recycling. The symbol originated on the first Earth Day in 1970, created by Gary Anderson, then a 23-year-old student for the Container Corporation of America. The symbol is not trademarked and is in the public domain.[1] Many variations on the logo have been created since its creation.

The Universal Recycling Symbol, here rendered with a black outline and green fill. Both filled and outline versions of the symbol are in use. Two of the arrows fold over each other and one fold under.
Outline version. In this example, all the arrows are folding under themselves.

The unicode U+2672 glyph is:

History

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Worldwide attention to environmental issues led to the first Earth Day in 1970.[2] Container Corporation of America, a large producer of recycled paperboard, sponsored a contest for art and design students at high schools and colleges across the country to raise awareness of environmental issues. The contest, which drew more than 500 submissions, was won by Gary Anderson, whose entry was the image now known as the universal recycling symbol.[1][3] Anderson, then a 23-year-old college student at the University of Southern California, was awarded a $2,500 scholarship.[4] The public-domain status of the symbol has been challenged, but this challenge was unsuccessful owing to the wide use of the symbol. However, the universal recycling symbol may have been inspired by similar existing symbols at the time, such as one featuring two arrows chasing each other in a circle that Volkswagen stamped in the early 1960s into some automobile parts it remanufactured[citation needed].

Variants

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The recycling symbol is in the public domain and is not a trademark. The Container Corporation of America originally applied for a trademark on the design, but the application was challenged, and the corporation decided to abandon the claim.[1] As such, anyone may use or modify the recycling symbol, royalty-free.

Though use of the symbol is regulated by law in some countries,[5] countless variants of it exist worldwide. Anderson's original proposal had the arrows form a triangle standing on its tip—upside down compared with the versions most commonly seen today—but the CCA, in adopting Anderson's design, rotated it 60° to stand on its base instead.[1]

Both Anderson's proposal and CCA's designs form a Möbius strip with one half-twist by having two of the arrows fold over each other and one fold under, thereby canceling out one of the other folds. However, most variants of the symbol used today have all the arrows folding over themselves, producing a Möbius strip with three half-twists. Existing single half-twist variants of the logo do not generally agree on which of the arrows is the one to fold underneath. The logo is usually displayed with the arrows circulating clockwise, but the underlying Möbius strip exists in two topologically distinct mirror-image forms of opposite handedness.

The American Paper Institute originally promoted four different variants of the recycling symbol for different purposes. The plain Möbius loop, either white with an outline or solid black, was to be used to indicate that a product was recyclable. The other two variants had the Möbius loop inside a circle—either white on black or black on white—and were meant for products made of recycled materials, with the white-on-black version to be used for 100% recycled fiber, and the black-on-white version for products containing both recycled and unrecycled fiber.[1] For example, a paper envelope might have both the first and last of these four symbols to indicate that it was recyclable and made from both recycled and unrecycled fibers.

In addition to the resin identification codes 1–7 in the triangular recycling symbol, Unicode lists the following recycling symbols:

  • U+2672 UNIVERSAL RECYCLING SYMBOL
  • U+267A RECYCLING SYMBOL FOR GENERIC MATERIALS
  • U+267B BLACK UNIVERSAL RECYCLING SYMBOL
  • U+267C RECYCLED PAPER SYMBOL (indicates product contains recycled paper)
  • U+267D PARTIALLY-RECYCLED PAPER SYMBOL (indicates product contains partially recycled paper)
  • U+267E PERMANENT PAPER SIGN (e.g. for acid-free paper)

An ISO/IEC working group has researched and documented some of the variations of the recycling logo in use during 2001 and has made recommendations for adding some more of them to the Unicode standard.[6]

With the rapid expansion of materials converted to printer filament for 3D printing using recyclebot technology, a large expansion of resin identification codes has been proposed.[7]

Resin identification code

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In 1988, the American Society of the Plastics Industry (SPI) developed the resin identification code that is used to indicate the predominant plastic material used in the manufacture of the product or packaging. Their purpose is to assist recyclers with sorting the collected materials, but they do not necessarily mean that the product/packaging can be recycled either through domestic curbside collection or industrial collections. The SPI symbols are loosely based on the Möbius loop symbol, but feature simpler bent (rather than folded over) arrows that can be embossed on plastic surfaces without loss of detail. The arrows are formed into a flat, two-dimensional triangle rather than the pseudo-three-dimensional triangle used in the original recycling logo.

The resin identification codes can be represented by Unicode icons

  • U+2673 RECYCLING SYMBOL FOR TYPE-1 PLASTICS
  • U+2674 RECYCLING SYMBOL FOR TYPE-2 PLASTICS
  • U+2675 RECYCLING SYMBOL FOR TYPE-3 PLASTICS
  • U+2676 RECYCLING SYMBOL FOR TYPE-4 PLASTICS
  • U+2677 RECYCLING SYMBOL FOR TYPE-5 PLASTICS
  • U+2678 RECYCLING SYMBOL FOR TYPE-6 PLASTICS
  • U+2679 RECYCLING SYMBOL FOR TYPE-7 PLASTICS

Recycling codes extend these numbers above 7 to include various non-plastic materials, including metals, glass, paper and cardboard, and batteries of various types.

Other variants

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Taiwan's recycling symbol features the use of negative space to also create arrows pointing outward.

♾, an infinity sign (∞) inside a circle, represents the permanent paper symbol, used in packaging and publishing to signify the use of durable acid-free paper. In some ways, this logo expresses the opposite intention from the recycle logo, in that the acid-free paper is intended to last indefinitely, rather than being recycled. Nevertheless, acid-free paper does not usually contain toxic materials (although certain inks do), so it is easily recycled or composted.

A satirical version of the classic recycling logo also exists, in which the three arrows are twisted from a circular pattern to pointing radially outward, thus symbolizing wasteful one-time usage rather than environmentally friendly recycling. This message is reinforced by the circular inscription, "THIS PROJECT WAS ENVIRONMENTALLY UNFRIENDLY", surrounding the modified logo. The satirical logo appears in the 1998 catalog of an installation art work in Bayonne, New Jersey, in which the artist Steven Pippin modified a row of glass-doored washing machines in a laundromat to operate as giant cameras. The cameras were used to take sequential photographs in the manner of pioneering stop motion photographer Eadweard Muybridge. The front-loading washing machines were then used to develop and process the 24 inch (61 cm) diameter circular film negatives.[8]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Jones, Penny; Jerry Powell (May 1999). "Gary Anderson has been found!" (PDF). Resource Recycling is Good: North America's Recycling and Composting Journal: 1–2. Retrieved 2011-05-26.
  2. ^ West, Larry. "The History and Importance of Earth Day". LiveAbout. Retrieved 2020-04-05.
  3. ^ Travers, Andrew (March 12, 2024). "The recycling symbol's Aspen roots". Aspen Journalism. Retrieved June 29, 2024.
  4. ^ Yoder, Kate (June 12, 2024). "How the recycling symbol lost its meaning". Grist. Retrieved June 29, 2024.
  5. ^ "Rules Governing Use of Recycling Logo". Recycling Expert [website]. recyclingexpert.co.uk. Retrieved 2011-05-16.
  6. ^ Everson, Michael; Freytag, Asmus. "Background information on Recycling Symbols" (PDF). ISO/IEC JTC1/SC2/WG2 N2342. ISO/IEC. Retrieved 2011-05-26.
  7. ^ Emily J. Hunt, Chenlong Zhang, Nick Anzalone, Joshua M. Pearce, Polymer recycling codes for distributed manufacturing with 3-D printers, Resources, Conservation and Recycling, 97, pp. 24–30 (2015). open access
  8. ^ Pippin, Steven John; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (1998). Laundromat locomotion : Mr. Pippin : [on the occasion of the Exhibition Laundromat Locomotion] (Softcover). [Amsterdam; Dresden]: Verlag der Kunst. ISBN 978-90-5705-094-7.

Further reading

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