"Bunny hill" symbol, used in America for signaling ski pistes for novices
Shawn Steele
Shawn.Steele at microsoft.com
Thu May 28 15:04:11 CDT 2015
So is double black diamond a separate symbol? Or just two of the black diamond?
And Blue-Black?
I’m drawing a blank on a specific bunny sign, in my experience those are usually just green.
Aren’t there a lot of cartography symbols for various systems that aren’t present in Unicode?
From: Unicode [mailto:unicode-bounces at unicode.org] On Behalf Of Philippe Verdy
Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2015 12:47 PM
To: unicode Unicode Discussion
Subject: "Bunny hill" symbol, used in America for signaling ski pistes for novices
Is there a symbol that can represent the "Bunny hill" symbol used in North America and some other American territories with mountains, to designate the ski pistes open to novice skiers (those pistes are signaled with green signs in Europe).
I'm looking for the symbol itself, not the color, or the form of the sign.
For example blue pistes in Europe are designed with a green circle in America, but we have a symbol for the circle; red pistes in Europe are signaled by a blue square in America, but we have a symbol for the square; black pistes in Europe are signaled by a black diamond in America, but we also have such "black" diamond in Unicode.
But I can't find an equivalent to the American "Bunny hill" signal, equivalent to green pistes in Europe (this is a problem for webpages related to skiing: do we have to embed an image ?).
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