Here is a concise summary of the provided text:
**Title (implied):** Over-Complicating Logos
**Content Summary:**
* The author sets out to intentionally over-complicate three well-known logos:
1. **Pringles**:
- Manipulates the Pringles man's face in Photoshop, adding glasses, distorting features, and giving him a bow tie.
2. **Mozilla Firefox**:
- Downloads an old Firefox logo, adds a new fox image, and uses liquify to merge and reshape the elements.
- Adds fire to the design, as per the "Firefox" name.
3. **Apple**:
- Uses an old, intricate Apple logo from 1976 as a base.
- Adds a tree, removes apples, and incorporates distant hills, water, and a sky, using liquify to blend elements.
- Inserts a painting of Isaac Newton, referencing the original logo's theme.
**Tone and Outcome:** The exercise is done in a humorous, self-deprecating manner, with the author acknowledging the resulting logos are not improvements but rather intentionally over-complicated and imperfect creations.
Here are the key facts extracted from the text, keeping each fact a short sentence and excluding opinions:
**1.** The project involves over-complicating three logos.
**2.** The first logo being altered is the Pringles logo.
**3.** The Pringles logo manipulation is done using Photoshop.
**4.** The original Pringles logo features a man with a mustache.
**5.** The second logo being altered is the Mozilla Firefox logo.
**6.** The original Firefox logo features a fox circling the Earth.
**7.** The third logo being altered is the Apple logo.
**8.** Apple's logo has remained the same since 2015.
**9.** Historical Apple logos were different, with a notable intricate design in 1976.
**10.** The 1976 Apple logo features a picture with a tree and a person (identified as Newton).
**11.** The tools used for manipulation include Photoshop's liquify feature and grass brushes.
**12.** The project involves adding background elements like grass, hills, water, and sky to the logos.
**13.** An image of Isaac Newton is added to the altered Apple logo, sourced from a painting due to lack of selfies.