Vegetarian and vegan symbolism

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Multiple symbols have been developed to represent vegetarianism and veganism. Several are used on food packaging, including voluntary labels such as the Vegan Society trademark or the European Vegetarian symbol[1][2] as well as the vegetarian and non-vegetarian marks mandated by the Indian government.[3] Symbols may also be used by members of the vegetarian and vegan communities to represent their identities, and in the course of animal rights activism.[citation needed]

Vegetarian symbols[]

Indian vegetarian mark[]

The green dot symbol (left) identifies lacto-vegetarian food, and the brown dot symbol (right) identifies non-vegetarian food.

Packaged food and toothpaste products sold in India are required to be labelled with a mandatory mark in order to be distinguished between lacto-vegetarian and non-vegetarian.[3][4][5][6][7] The symbol is in effect following the Food Safety and Standards (Packaging and Labelling) Act of 2006, and received a mandatory status after the framing of the respective regulations (Food Safety and Standards (Packaging and Labelling) Regulation) in 2011.[3] According to the law, vegetarian food should be identified by a green symbol and non-vegetarian food with a brown symbol.

The fact that the symbols are identical in shape mean that a person with color blindness may not be able to distinguish them. Some have recommended using a different shape in place of the brown dot.[citation needed]

V-label[]

Vegetarian-mark.svg

The V-label, a V with a leaf, originated with the European Vegetarian Union. The V-Label is a standardized European vegetarian label from the EVU with the aim of easy identification of vegetarian products and services.[8]

Vegan symbols[]

Vegan Trademark[]

The Vegan Trademark, a flower, is an internationally recognised standard from The Vegan Society that registers products with the aim of easy identification of vegan products.

Enclosed V[]

Vegetarian-movement symbol.png

The enclosed V (modeled after the enclosed A and the enclosed–E symbols) is a popular vegan symbol, especially on social networks where it is represented by the Ⓥ symbol of the Enclosed Alphanumerics Unicode block. A "V" inside a circle is not used to label products as vegan nor should be relied upon to determine if a product is vegan. A Kosher organization (Vaad Hoeir of St. Louis) owns and uses a US trademark (certification mark) consisting of a V inside a circle.[9]

Seedling emoji[]

On internet forums and social networks, the seedling emoji