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1925-1946 1946-1962 1962-1995 1967-1995 (Unused) 1995-2020 2020-present
1925-1946 1946-1962 1962-1995 1967-1995 (Unused) 1995-2020 2020-present

NHK (abbreviated from 日本放送協会, and officially known as in English: Japan Broadcasting Corporation) is a Japanese public organization which has always been known by romanized acronym in Japanese. Founded as "Tokyo Broadcasting Station" on 29 of November 1924, and merged with Osaka and Nagoya radio stations into a national broadcasting corporation on 6 August 1926.

NHK started television broadcasting on 1 of June 1950 with a Japanese Broadcasting Act, followed by its public national channel in 1953, its educational channel in 1959, and internationally in 1995. It is the first broadcaster in HD in 1979, and 8K in 1995.

JOAK Radio

1925–1946

JOAK

NHK began as a JOAK Radio, now NHK Radio 1 in Tokyo on 22 March 1925. The first radio broadcasting in Japan, introduces an callsign on the top, and portrait photo with a woman and a radio speaker in the middle, and the Japanese text that later changed the name in 1926.

NHK

1946–1962

The name "Nippon Hōsō Kyōkai" became a three-letter-acronym using as rōmaji, inspired from the "The big three" of American broadcasters, and the BBC that they did earlier.

1962–1995

It has two variants by 1962, both had been italicized.

NHK Old

The first it was separated letters variant.

Logo Variant

And the second it was a gathered letters variant.

1967–1995 (unused)

Nhk 1967

It never used in 1967, It supposed to demonstrate a "N" and a "K", and between of two letters there would be a two thin rectangles, forming a letter "H".

1995–2020

NHK logo
NHK Logo

This logo known as "the NHK eggs" has been using since 1995, showing three gathered eggs and each one has a letter. It has two variants: one for rainbow gradient outline, and a gray outline.

2020-present

Gf nhk logo gray

At the end of March 2020, the NHK scrapped the iconic eggs logo in favour of the wordmark logo. All their channels and radio stations had their logos updated to include the new wordmark.

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