sharevova.blogg.se

Keep calm and carry on
Keep calm and carry on







keep calm and carry on

It’s a cultural – and marketing – phenomenon. It has spread further by being remixed and memeified: Keep Calm And Drink Tea, Now Panic And Freak Out, Change Words And Be Hilarious. Barter Books still sells its prints and a range of other items – it is the source of the poster’s rebirth after all – but the Manleys are keen that the phrase be returned to the public domain (there’s now also a petition to reverse the recent trademark decision).Ī decade into the poster’s second life it’s ironic that any ‘calm’ it once sought to instil is now caught up in a decidely 21st-century ‘carry on’.The original Keep Calm survivor at Barter Books, Alnwick. His online shop now sells other non-KCACO merchandise, but the action unsettled numerous eBay traders who have since been forced by the site to stop selling goods using the line. Mark Coop, who had founded Keep Calm and Carry On Ltd in 2006, successfully applied for an EU trademark on the phrase. In August last year the story took another turn. Modern tastes dictate that these posters are available in green and blue, however, rather than in the bright pillar box red that originally united them. The craze also reignited interest in the two other posters that were produced at the same time and that, unlike ‘Keep Calm’, saw active use: ‘Freedom Is in Peril: Defend It With All Your Might’ and ‘Your Courage, Your Cheerfulness, Your Resolution Will Bring Us Victory’. And it’s been spoofed and parodied many times over (‘Keep Calm and Have a Cup­cake’), often with the crown device substituted for a more fitting emblem. Apparently, it is particularly popular in the US and Germany, with financial firms and advertising agencies. The phrase has since become an industry in itself with ‘Keep Calm and Carry On’ products being bought and sold all over the world. It now brings up a cool 42m hits on Google. In this wave of interest in the phrase, it soon relocated to mugs, mouse mats, T-shirts and beyond. The subsequent increase in demand for the poster broke the shop’s website, says Manley, and the staff were immediately put on packing duties. As more and more customers enquired about obtaining a copy, the Manleys printed up an initial batch of 500, and had sold a few thousand before the poster was featured in a Guardian supplement in December 2005. Admiring the bold red and white design – the only graphic concession is a George VI crown above the text – they framed the poster and hung it by the shop’s till. Stuart Manley, who runs Barter Books with his wife Mary, discovered it folded up at the bottom of a box of books they had recently bought from auction. With only a few rare copies in existence, the phrase effectively remained unknown for 60 years, until an original of the poster was discovered in a bookshop in Alnwick, Northumberland in 2000.

#Keep calm and carry on series

It was kept in reserve only to be used if the country was invaded – after the war the entire series of posters was pulped. Yet despite being printed by the Government’s Ministry of Information on around 2.5m posters in August 1939, ‘Keep Calm and Carry On’ was never actually seen in public, according to research conducted by historian Dr Rebecca Lewis. In part, this is due to the nostalgic appeal of its stiff-upper-lip sentiment, delivered in clipped alliterative RP, but the timing of its reappearance as a recession loomed could not have been bettered. Similarly resonant, ‘Keep Calm and Carry On’ has now perhaps become the most famous of the lot. ‘Dig for Victory’, ‘Careless Talk Costs Lives’, ‘Make Do and Mend’ have become classics of the medium, the latter gaining a new relevance in these frugal times. A handful of British second world war propaganda posters employed slogans that are still well known today.









Keep calm and carry on