Virginia Tech Letterhead 2026

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Unveiled in 1984, the athletic logo is a composite of designs submitted by two Virginia Tech students\u2014Lisa Eichler of Chesapeake, Va., and Chris Craft of Roanoke, Va. \u2014to a competition sponsored by the university's art department. The two students received $50.
Acherus Grotesque is the primary type family for the Virginia Tech brand. It has 14 styles and is based on geometric forms. Acherus Grotesque should be used in most cases for headlines, sub-headlines, quotes, and callouts.
Faced with such an unwieldy name, people began calling it Virginia Polytechnic Institute, or simply VPI. On June 23, 1944, the legislature followed suit, officially changing the name to Virginia Polytechnic Institute.

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People also ask

Virginia Tech's mascot is really just a turkey, but they call it a HokieBird. The Virginia Tech Hokie is a thing of mystery. For fans unfamiliar with Tech's mascot, the much-beloved bird is an orange and maroon turkey\u2014but it's called a HokieBird, hence the nickname "Hokies."
A new logo The new logo encapsulates the spirit of the university's educational experience and highlights Virginia Tech's identity as an inclusive community that thrives at the intersection of academic disciplines.
What does Hokie mean? No, a Hokie is not a dance you learned back in elementary school involving sticking bits of your body \u201cin and out\u201d (that's the hokey-pokey). Spelled with an \u201cie\u201d at the end, a Hokie is the mascot of Virginia Tech, short for Virginia Agricultural and Mechanical College and Polytechnic Institute.
Often referred to as a 'font', Helvetica is actually a typeface. It's a complete set of sans serif characters with a common design ethos. But at the same time, the typeface comprises a collection of fonts, each in a specific weight, style and size, with different levels of condensation as well as italic versions.
In the 1890s, a student named O.M. Stull, Class of 1896, won a $5 prize for coming up with a new spirit cheer, now known as \u201cOld Hokie.\u201d The original went: Hoki, Hoki, Hoki, Hy.

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