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-   -   An old symbol many of us may have drawn - (https://thetfp.com/tfp/general-discussion/149696-old-symbol-many-us-may-have-drawn.html)

Pogue Mahone 07-23-2009 10:57 AM

An old symbol many of us may have drawn -
 
I saw this on another forum and got me thinking.

Back in middle school, all my friends and I were seemingly obsessed about drawing this symbol:

http://i715.photobucket.com/albums/w...368089565s.jpg

and I realized something - to my knowledge, we had no idea what the hell it meant. All we knew is it was cool. Does anyone know what it is?

ShaniFaye 07-23-2009 11:07 AM

I always drew it as an S for my name (Shannon)...if it had another meaning I have no clue...but I would write my whole name in letters like that

Willravel 07-23-2009 11:23 AM

I believe the genesis of that particular symbol is in the t-shirt company Stussy, which was incredibly popular in the 90s (along with Mossimo). While the normal Stussy logo looked like this:
http://www.1tshirtsworld.com/wp-cont...tussy-logo.gif
The graffiti resurgence meant that "urban" clothing producers were trying to capitalize on different styles commonly associated with graffiti. One such common style was the "S" that appears like you've drawn it. I remember being in maybe 3rd or 4th grade when I saw that "S" on a Stussy shirt.

Daniel_ 07-23-2009 11:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Pogue Mahone (Post 2674598)
I saw this on another forum and got me thinking.

Back in middle school, all my friends and I were seemingly obsessed about drawing this symbol:

http://i715.photobucket.com/albums/w...368089565s.jpg

and I realized something - to my knowledge, we had no idea what the hell it meant. All we knew is it was cool. Does anyone know what it is?

Oddly enough, my daughter (9) was being shown how to draw this by the daughter of her minder (13) a couple of weeks ago. I asked why and neither of them knew. :orly:

lostgirl 07-23-2009 11:33 AM

I used to see that on both sides of SK8, since it looks like a S and an 8. Not sure why, or what it means. SK8 of course is Skate.

Manic_Skafe 07-23-2009 11:58 AM

Haha - I drew that too! I think the fascination stemmed from the fact that the symbol was relatively is easy to draw and emerges so quickly after the first six lines are put down.

No idea what it could mean, if it means anything at all.

biznatch 07-23-2009 12:55 PM

Same here, drew it back in middle school. I think maybe it's just because many think graffiti is cool at that age, and that letter is easy to do.

roachboy 07-23-2009 01:04 PM

my pal the oxford english dictionary offers the following as symbolic meanings attached the the letter S:

Quote:

II. Symbolic uses.

5. s or S (Physics and Chem.) = sharp: orig. used to designate one of the four main series of lines in atomic spectra, but now more frequently applied to electronic orbitals, states, etc., possessing zero angular momentum and total symmetry.

6. [Initial letter of secondary.] Used, chiefly in S wave, to denote an earthquake wave which oscillates transversely to the direction of propagation, a shear wave; so named because secondary waves arrive at a given place later than primary waves. (See also P III. 3.)

7. In Physics, s and S denote the quantum numbers of spin angular momentum of one electron and a group of electrons, respectively. [Introduced by F. Hund 1926, in Zeitschr. f. Physik XXXVI. 658.]

8. S is used to denote one of the two directions of twist (see quot. 1935); so S-spun, etc.

9. [Initial letter of slow.] s-process (Astr.): a process thought to occur in giant stars by which heavy atomic nuclei are produced from other nuclei over a long time scale by a combination of neutron captures and more rapid beta decays.

10. S meter: a meter on a radio that indicates the strength of a received signal.

11. S-matrix (Physics): a scattering matrix, i.e. a matrix of probability amplitudes that occurs in the expression of the initial wave functions in a scattering process in terms of all the possible final wave functions. [After G. matrix S (W. Heisenberg 1943, in Zeitschr. f. Physik CXX. 521).]

12. S-band: the range of microwave frequencies between 1550 and 5200 megahertz, used for radio communication and radar.

13. Chem. [Abbrev. of L. sinister left.] S is used to designate (compounds having) a configuration about an asymmetric carbon atom in which the substituents, placed in order according to certain rules, form an anticlockwise sequence when viewed from a particular direction. Opp. R III. 6.

14. S denotes the strangeness quantum number of sub-atomic particles.

15. Particle Physics. [Repr. strange; also understood as = singlet or sideways.
‘The letters u and d stood for “up” and “down” (that is to say, isotopic spin projection up and down) and s stood for “strange”, with “singlet” (isotopic spin singlet) as a supplementary meaning. “Sideways” was a joke that I used from time to time.’{em}M. Gell-Mann, let. to R.W.B.]
s is used to designate one of the three quarks originally postulated by Gell-Mann, viz. the ‘strange’ quark, which has zero isospin and charge -.

wooÐs 07-23-2009 01:12 PM

Reminds me of this.

http://lohe.gmxhome.de/puzzles4trade...ke%20large.jpg

Fremen 07-23-2009 01:22 PM

It's almost like Infinity.
Trace your way in the middle then back behind to the front again.

allaboutmusic 07-23-2009 01:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Willravel (Post 2674611)
I believe the genesis of that particular symbol is in the t-shirt company Stussy, which was incredibly popular in the 90s (along with Mossimo). While the normal Stussy logo looked like this:
http://www.1tshirtsworld.com/wp-cont...tussy-logo.gif
The graffiti resurgence meant that "urban" clothing producers were trying to capitalize on different styles commonly associated with graffiti. One such common style was the "S" that appears like you've drawn it. I remember being in maybe 3rd or 4th grade when I saw that "S" on a Stussy shirt.

I remember a random rumour at the time that the Stussy logo spelt out Satanism if you looked carefully. Ah well, we were young.

LoganSnake 07-23-2009 03:08 PM

I drew that too. In around 7th or 8th grades. Interesting.

ShaniFaye 07-23-2009 03:31 PM

lets see...I was in middle school in 1979-80, 1980-81 and 1981-82 so its at LEAST 30 years old...any one in middle school before that, that remembers it from those days?

Jinn 07-23-2009 03:38 PM

Definitely did it in middle school, but only because it was cool to drawn 6 vertical lines, combine them with some diagonals and have a cool letter...

Charlatan 07-23-2009 03:59 PM

Never spent time doodling that. Must be an American thing.

Zeraph 07-23-2009 04:06 PM

I did that too in the 90s. Even made people out of em...

Redjake 07-23-2009 04:47 PM

man you were AWESOME if you could draw those things.

Bear Cub 07-23-2009 04:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Redjake (Post 2674799)
man you were AWESOME if you could draw those things.

Lets get one thing straight.

Some of us still are.

Seaver 07-23-2009 05:03 PM

Where I lived it was a Gangster Territory symbol, Southside.

Xerxys 07-23-2009 05:24 PM

Huh, I don't think it means anything because I grew up on the other side of the world and it was taught to us like some sort of puzzle coming together. You know, like how they asked you to draw the |X| sighn without lifting the pen or redrawing a line.

SecretMethod70 07-23-2009 05:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Charlatan (Post 2674779)
Never spent time doodling that. Must be an American thing.

I dunno, I'm American and I never drew it. I also never saw it drawn except by people whose name began with S.

cyklone 07-23-2009 05:59 PM

perhaps it's a stylized version of a mobius strip (although it doesn't show the twist well)??

Psycho Dad 07-23-2009 07:48 PM

I don't know what it is, have never seen it doodled, but I'll agree with whoever said it was satanic.

Reese 07-23-2009 07:54 PM

I thought it was the dollar sign as used by Wheel of Fortune...

Nevermind I was thinking about The Price is Right but that's a different logo..

although, I have also seen that drawing with the top and bottom diagonal lines looped at the points.

Walt 07-23-2009 08:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Willravel (Post 2674611)
I believe the genesis of that particular symbol is in the t-shirt company Stussy, which was incredibly popular in the 90s...

Yep, I had a Stussy t-shirt when I was in 6th grade with that symbol on it.

Plan9 07-23-2009 08:41 PM

I always thought it was some kinda goofy infinity sign.

Willravel 07-23-2009 08:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Walter Sobchak (Post 2674931)
Yep, I had a Stussy t-shirt when I was in 6th grade with that symbol on it.

6th grade? That was back when I was part of the Seattle Seven. Me and six other guys. :cool:

DaniGirl 07-23-2009 09:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Pogue Mahone (Post 2674598)

http://i715.photobucket.com/albums/w...368089565s.jpg

and I realized something - to my knowledge, we had no idea what the hell it meant. All we knew is it was cool. Does anyone know what it is?

Really good question, I have no idea.:shakehead:

Toaster126 07-24-2009 03:32 PM

I guessed the symbol by the thread title, but I'm surprised there are so many of us that remember this from elementary/middle school. Oh what little consumers we were.

SSJTWIZTA 07-24-2009 09:56 PM

haha i too used to draw this thing. still, no idea what it means.

ItWasMe 07-24-2009 10:18 PM

It looks vaguely familiar, but I don't know from where. My daughter said everyone drew it in elementary school, which would be very late 90's and early 2000's.

We used to doodle letters and numbers that were rounded like balloons. Not like this.

Pookie003 07-25-2009 06:44 AM

Haha, when I was first taught how to draw the S in 3rd grade or so I thought it was so cool I would draw all my S's like that. One day this really mean girl in my class told me that it was a gang sign and when I didn't believe her she told the teacher and I got in trouble. The teacher didn't understand it so I go a time-out. Lame.

Daniel_ 07-25-2009 07:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ItWasMe (Post 2675499)
It looks vaguely familiar, but I don't know from where. My daughter said everyone drew it in elementary school, which would be very late 90's and early 2000's.

We used to doodle letters and numbers that were rounded like balloons. Not like this.

Me too! Must be a 70's thing. :paranoid:

Redjake 07-25-2009 08:07 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bear Cub (Post 2674800)
Lets get one thing straight.

Some of us still are.

hahahaha touche!!!!!!!!


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