2.21.2010

Top-25 Tineye Reverse Image Search Results (click image to see current results)

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Cool Searches (click image to search)

This page, along with our widgets page, showcases some of the most interesting TinEye search examples we’ve come across. If you come across a TinEye search with great results and you want to share it, just click on ‘Recommend as a Cool Search’ next to your query image. We review every Cool Search submission we get.
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With stores in 18 countries, it's no wonder that the 7-Eleven logo is everywhere online.
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Little little energy star, how I wonder where you are?
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Because the cookie factory is located in Toronto, we seem to have a lot of Oreos laying around. They don't lay around long!
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V–J day in Times Square, perhaps the most famous photograph by Alfred Eisenstaedt, is of an American sailor kissing a young woman on V-J Day in Times Square on August 14, 1945, that was originally published in Life magazine.
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Unilever’s Heartbrand is a very unique brand found on ice cream treats the world over. What makes it unique is that local brand names are preserved, but now all carry the heart shape in common.
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Becoming Fair Trade Certified is a difficult process. Taking the logo and using it is easy. How would you get caught? Oh yeah, TinEye.
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Mac software powerhouse Panic finds unauthorized uses of their logo for FTP product Transmit.
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“An Elephant is powerless to think in terms of an ant, in spite of the best intentions.”
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Someone having some retouching fun with an old terminal and an iPhone.
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Her outfits and adventures may change, but her expression is always the same. TinEye found Hello Kitty’s button nose all over the web. She is quite busy!
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Everyone is feeling the pinch of high gas prices.
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Starbucks coffee is everywhere, but so is their logo.
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According to wikipedia Lenna is the name given to a standard test image originally cropped from a Playboy magazine centerfold picture of Lena Söderberg, a Swedish model who posed naked for the November 1972 issue. The image is probably the most widely used test image for all sorts of image processing algorithms (such as compression and denoising) and related scientific publications.
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This popular poster was originally created in 1917, and was used to recruit soldiers for WWI and II. Over 90 years later, Uncle Sam is alive on the web, still making demands!
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Though her smile is elusive, her image is not. The Mona Lisa is perhaps the most famous painting of all time and not surprisingly, it has found a new life on the web where thousands of versions now appear. Also available as an embeddable widget.
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Grant Wood’s 1930 painting American Gothic captures early American portraiture so compellingly that webmasters can’t help themselves but transmogrify it into the most frightening forms of photoshoppery.
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This search has yielded more results than almost any other search we’ve done so far. Is that a scary thing? The secret is that the layout of the cover is the same on every For Dummies book, no matter what it’s about. So TinEye has found thousands of books in this series based on its design alone!
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It’s no surprise that this image appears all over the web. What’s neat about this search is that the query image shows both the front and back of the bill, and TinEye is able to find results showing just the front, just the back, or other combinations. There are also some amusing modifications in this results set as well.

Check out this “all-star” logo search for a variety of incarnations on the web. According to Wikipedia, this shoe has been made since 1917… decades before the invention of the JPG.
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