What is 'Keep Calm and Carry On'?
Right. Pay attention at the back, and no slouching.
Keep Calm and Carry On was the third in a series of
World War 2 posters drawn up by the UK Ministry of Information in order
to
boost the morale of the British people by passing on a
message from King George VI. The posters were a stark white text on a
red
background, with the only image on the poster being the
royal crown of George VI.
At the end of the war, the posters were collected up and pulped. It is believed that only two original posters out of a print run of over a million survive to this day.
The story would have ended there were it not for Stuart and Mary Manley, who run a bookshop called Barter Books in Northumberland. Whilst sorting through a box of old books, they found one of the few surviving original copies of the 'Keep Calm and Carry On' poster. They liked it so much that they had the poster framed and placed near the till in their shop.
They soon found that customers were very keen on the poster - even to the point of asking if they could buy it! So, Stuart and Mary started selling and printing facsimilie copies of the poster. The rest, as they say, is history...
In the years since 2000 the poster has become world famous, having been mentioned in news articles, on TV and having been seen in many disparate places from country pubs to Parliament.
Frequently asked questions
So was this poster real?
Yes! Although it was never published, it was a real
poster that was produced by the UK Government during the Second World
War.
Who produced it?
It was produced by the Ministry of Information - a
Government Department set up at the beginning of the war with the
primary
aim of producing propaganda material. They produced many
famous campaigns including the classic 'Careless talk costs lives'
campaign.
Is the poster out of copyright?
The poster is out of copyright and therefore can be
freely reproduced and mashed up. Spare a
thought, however, for Barter Books who rediscovered this
classic poster. They are an independent bookshop in the UK who sell
reproductions of the original poster.
What font does the poster use?
Anyone under the age of 20 or so might not believe this,
but there was a time when computers didn't exist. The Keep Calm poster
was hand-designed by a (sadly) anonymous civil servant and as such
doesn't use a standard font. However a very clever chap called Keith
Bates has painstakingly recreated the original font as closely as
possible by taking examples from the original Keep Calm poster and the
two other posters in the same series. You can buy his font from his website.
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