I Think I Can Productions

From the Audiovisual Identity Database, the motion graphics museum


Background

I Think I Can Productions is an early children's entertainment company founded on January 31, 1996 by Julie Aigner-Clark at her home in Alpharetta, Georgia to expose children to classical music, poetry, and art. The name was later changed to Aigner-Clark Productions in October 1998, likely due to her two-video deal with the I Think I Can English School, a Japanese school that teaches English, expiring, making her lose the rights to said name.

Logo (October 23, 1996-February 1, 1998)

Visuals: On a white background, a drawing of a boy's head is in the upper right half of the screen. Below it, there is:

I Think I Can Productions
Presents

The logo is still.

Variants:

  • A prototype variant exists where "Presents" is in a Perpetua Titling font.
  • At the end of tapes, the text reads:
Copyright 1996
I Think I Can Productions

A copyright stamp can be seen below.

Technique: Fading effects. The boy’s head was designed and drawn by Julie Aigner-Clark at her kitchen table.

Audio: The ending theme of the show.

Availability: Their earliest tapes were re-produced several years later with the original versions being discontinued. Because of this, this logo was plastered by the 1st Baby Einstein Company logo. Seen only on the original tapes of Baby Einstein: Language Nursery and Baby Mozart.

I Think I Can Productions
Aigner-Clark Productions
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