Snow White design language
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Snow White design language was an industrial design language developed by Frog Design. It was used by Apple Computer during 1984-1990. It is characterised by vertical and horizontal stripes acting as decoration and occasionally ventilation, as well as creating the illusion of the computer enclosure being smaller than it actually is. As the name suggests, it introduced a pure white color on the Apple IIc computer (the very first Snow White design) and various peripherals and accessories designed for it, but later moved to the "platinum" color lighter than previous "putty" colored models.
Apple products designed in the Snow White theme:
- Apple IIc (1984)
- Disk IIc (1984)
- Apple Scribe Printer (1984)
- ImageWriter II (1985)
- Apple UniDisk 3.5 (1985)
- Apple Personal Modem (1985)
- LaserWriter (1985)
- Apple IIGS (1986)
- Apple 3.5 Drive (1986)
- Apple IIc Plus (1988)
- Macintosh SE series (1986)
- Macintosh II series (1987)
- LaserWriter II (1988)
- AppleCD SC (1988)
- Macintosh IIx (1988)
- Macintosh IIcx (1989)
- Macintosh IIci (1989)
- Macintosh IIfx (1990)
Additionally, Macintosh XL was a Lisa altered to run Mac software and had Snow White stripes added to the design. Most Apple Displays introduced between 1984 and 1990 also used Snow White.
[edit] External links
- Frog design
- Apple and the History of Personal Computer Design: Snow White
- Apple //c writeup (first Snow White machine)