The classic "Fruit of the Loom" cornucopia (horn of plenty) includes an apple, purple grapes, green grapes, currants and leaves.
The 4 human characters in the Fruit of the Loom commercials are the Apple, the Purple Grape, the Green Grape, and the Leaf.
The Fruit of the Loom guys are known by the names of their respective fruits: Leaf, Grape, Apple, and Cornucopia. These characters represent the different fruits included in the company's logo.
Fruit of the Loom
Fruit of the Loom
Yes there was a banana also
can yoou use plain fruit of the loom t-shirts with your own design logo to sell
Fruit of the loom means... Fruit of a loom!
There are four fruits. The 1893-developed logo includes: * Purple grapes * Green grapes * Apple * Gooseberries or currants (according to the dictionary, they are the same thing, or at least both belong to the bush genus "ribes") In addition to the fruit, on the commercials, there is a character who appears to be a bunch of leaves, which matches with the leaves accompanying the fruit on the logo. These leaves look the most like tobacco leaves in real life, but some assert that they are fig leaves, which traditionally cover the same area of the body as Fruit of the Loom products do. The company only says that they are leaves.
Fruit of the Loom was created in 1851.
Green Grape, Apple, Purple Grape, and Leaf
what is the ticker symbol for fruit of the loom
The Fruit of the Loom guys, like the logo, include purple grapes, green grapes, a red apple and a fig leaf. If you're looking for the "Peanut Butter Jelly Time" song in one of their commercials, tough luck, kid. ...Uhmm I find this perverted. *snicker snicker* A banana... in the underwe- BAHAHAHAHA!
The trademark "Fruit of the Loom" is a play on words. The phrase "fruit of the womb" (children) appears in the Bible and elsewhere, and the rhyming word "loom" is the basic threading tool used to produce cloth.