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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › TF1TF1 - Wikipedia

    TF1 adopted a multicoloured logo and cel-animated idents created by Catherine Chaillet , and from 1976 until 1985, analogue computer-generated idents produced using the Scanimate system were also used, created by the American company Robert Abel and Associates with background music composed by Vladimir Cosma. The 1975 TF1 logo was later modified in 1984 and again in 1987.

  2. Dec 8, 2008 · Paris-based nobrain created a staggering number of beautifully crafted idents for TF1, France's biggest network. Each five-second clip is jam-packed with detail and fluid animation that reflect the channel's many personalities. I love the seemingly endless permutations of the typography. nobrain really put in a ton of extra effort on these.

  3. Jan 7, 2024 · Audio: An orchestral tune based on TF1's 6-note leitmotif since 2013, driven by strings and a choir. Composed by Alex Jaffray and Gilles Facérias at START-REC. Availability: Seen on recent films like Way Down and Maria rêve. Also appears on reissues of old movies like Nights in Cabiria and La passante du Sans-Souci. .

  4. TV Idents / TF1 - Sabotage studio 2008 - 2012 Directed by N0brain Lighting, Rendering,texturing (occasionnaly modeling, animation) TF1 jingles from Laurent Harduin on Vimeo.

    • Overview
    • Radiovision-PTT
    • Radiodiffusion nationale Télévision
    • Télécinéma Radiodiffusion nationale
    • Fernsehsender Paris
    • RDF Télévision Française
    • RTF Télévision
    • Première Chaîne de l’ORTF
    • TF1

    This page only shows primary logo variants.

    For other related logos and images, see:

    (Télévision Française 1) is the oldest and most popular television channel in France, and one of the oldest in Europe, having been launched on April 26, 1935. It is the flagship channel of Groupe TF1, the largest French commercial TV broadcaster. TF1, flagship public channels France 2 and France 3, and competing commercial channel M6 are the four most popular TV channels in France.

    TF1 was launched in 1935 as Radio-PTT Vision by the government of France. On January 1, 1975, it adopted the name TF1, and in April 1987, it was privatized. This made Antenne 2 and FR3 the new primary state-owned channels, with the result that France is the only European country whose flagship public channel is not numbered 1.

    1935–1937

    TF1 was launched and founded as Radiovision-PTT on April 26, 1935.

    1937–1939

    Following successful trials of a "high-definition" 455-line electronic television system designed by the Thomson-Houston Electric Company, Radio-PTT Vision renamed itself as Radiodiffusion nationale Télévision (RN Télévision) in July 1937. It stopped broadcasting in 1939 during the Second World War.

    August-September 1939

    Despite the channel officially stopping broadcasts in September 1939, it still broadcasted occasionally until June 1940 for maintenance purposes.

    1943–1944

    During the German occupation in France, the channel was re-launched as Fernsehsender Paris, a German-French television channel, and was controlled by the German organization. Fernsehsender Paris stopped broadcasts on August 12, 1944, one week before the liberation of Paris.

    1944–1949

    Television broadcasts in France resumed on October 1, 1944 under the name Télévision française, and following the creation of Radiodiffusion française on March 23, 1945, the television service was renamed as RDF Télévision française.

    1949–1959

    was renamed as Radiodiffusion-télévision française (RTF) on February 9, 1949.

    1964–1975

    Following the creation of RTF Télévision 2 (now France 2) in 1963, the first channel was renamed as Première chaîne de la RTF (First Channel of the RTF), and later as Première chaîne de l’ORTF (the first channel of the ORTF), when the ORTF (but now TDF and La 1ère) was created on July 25, 1964.

    1975–1990 (primary), 1990–1992 (secondary)

    Typography:  Unknown Launched:  January 1, 1975

    1987–1990, 2018

    Since its privatization in April 1987, TF1 is no longer called Télévision Française 1.

    1989–present

    Typography:  Gill Sans Ultra Bold (modified) Launched:  1989 This logo was used as a transitory logo between the triangle shaped logo and the current logo. This logo was used from summer 1989 to February 1990, but the TF1 text is used today. The triangle-shaped logo from 1987 was still used sometimes.

  5. Vidéo, is a sub-label of TF1 Vidéo, TF1 's label for video releases of their programs. In contrast to the main label, TF! Vidéo is used for video releases of children programming, namely those broadcasted as part of the TF! block from which the sub-label took its original name. After the block was renamed to TFOU in 2007, TF!

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  7. Aug 9, 2024 · Jeunesse), is a children's programming block broadcast every morning on TF1 which launched in September 1, 1997 as TF! before taking on the name TFOU in August 2007. The block itself replaced Club Dorothée, similarly focused on programming for younger audiences, produced by AB Productions for TF1. While Club Dorothée was quite varied in its ...

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