

Read more #1 “Illuminati” by John Langdon #2 “The Stone Rose” by mirving123 #3 “Steampunk” by Bastian Pinnenberg #4 “Labyrinth” by Krzychu #5 “Marley” by mirving123 #6 “One Blood One Love” by Christian Oliver Cruz #7 “Chopin” by Daniel Dostal #8 “Azathoth” by Bastian Pinnenberg #9 “Love/Hate” by nichck #10 “Shark Attack” by wowtattoos #11 “Baltimore” by mirving123 #12 “Right/Wrong” by Bastian Pinnenberg #13 “Lawrence” by revcruz #14 “Samantha/Marcianne” by wowtattoos. Tattoos carry a long and colorful history as markers of a rite of passage, as a sign of. Without further ado, let start twisting our neck and try to view them in upside down :) With patience and creativity, you can turn any word into an ambigram.īelow are my collection of 40 really cool and creatively designed ambigrams. These typographical artworks are used by graphic designers because of their symmetry and the optical illusions it present.Īmbigrams became much more popular when it was prominently featured in Dan Brown‘s bestselling novel, Angels & Demons. Today, ambigrams are used in graphic design, commercial logos, book covers, tattoo artworks and music albums. but the most basic and popular ones are the flipscript or rotational ambigram in which word or words when flipped both horizontal or vertical way, still spells the same word as before. There are many types of ambigrams such as rotational ambigrams, reflective types, 3-dimensional, etc. Bagai, a former editor of The Enigma, the official organ of The National Puzzlers’ League.

The term “ambigram” was first used to mean “ambiguous anagram” by Judith E. An ambigram (from Latin: ambi both + gram = letter) is a word or words that can be read in more than one direction, where the word reads the same when upside down or turn over to form an entirely new word. Have you ever seen a word and read the same word upside down? This is one form of an ambigram.
