Puma jumping line art6/7/2023 ![]() ![]() Though Rudolf Dassler once joked that a long tail cost him more advertising money, its length remained pretty much like Lutz Backes had originally drawn it. Soon after, the PUMA cat started to appear on many PUMA products, but slightly changed over the years: The eye and nuzzle are gone and the ears are more pronounced today. “Lutz would have become a multi-millionaire, if he had agreed to receive commissions instead of this one-off payment.” New Puma smash fun Buck Jr size 5 Youth Crthift (1) 30.00 PUMA hats Ericalac (2) 9.00 More colors Puma Heat Transfer Vinyl Iron-on Decal - Puma Logo Neon Iron-On- Iron on Applique DecalCNVS (302) 3.75 FREE shipping PICK Vintage Puma Sweatshirt Puma Crewneck Sweater Pullover Puma Big Logo Spellout Sweatshirt Size S FashioonStar (177) 34. In addition, he got a pair of shoes and a sports bag. 10,000+ Free Line Art & Vintage Images - Pixabay Join Upload / 119 SafeSearch Most Relevant Images Orientation Size Color Published date 11,843 Free images of Line Art Related Images: vintage abstract art flowers retro sketch antique background cartoon Select a line art image to download for free. Backes was offered a cent of every PUMA item sold with his logo, but decided to charge the company 600 marks for this job. “Rudolf’s son Gerd Dassler was friends with the caricaturist Lutz Backes, who was assigned to design a new PUMA cat logo”, Helmut remembers. But it was not until 1967 that the first version of today’s PUMA logo was created like we know it today. While the first PUMA logo of 1948 did not quite reflect this agility, a more fashionable combined word and picture logo was introduced in 1957. Helmut Fischer remembers why: “Rudolf’s vision was that all of his products would embody the characteristics of a Puma cat: speed, strength, suppleness, endurance and agility – the same attributes that a successful athlete needs as well.” Fortunately, he quickly dismissed the idea and picked the name “PUMA”. When Rudolf Dassler founded his own shoe manufacturing company in 1948, he first named it “RUDA” – a combination of the first two letters of his first and last name. Have you ever wondered how PUMA’s jumping cat logo was born and advanced to one of the most famous trademarks in the world today?
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