Do you see a bearded dude in Oklahoma logo?

(Image Provided/Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation logo via Twitter)

(WISH) — The Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation is in a fun face-off over its logo that, to some, appears to be a bearded man in an orange hat.

Upon closer examination, the department’s logo shows a bird, a antlered animal and a fish. When it’s viewed in a smaller format, well, some people see what they see.

The department tweeted on Wednesday, “WE 👏 ARE 👏 AWARE 👏 THE 👏 LOGO 👏 LOOKS 👏 LIKE 👏 A 👏 BEARDED 👏 DUDE 👏 IN 👏 AN 👏 ORANGE 👏 HAT 👏

“—YOU 👏 DO 👏 NOT 👏 NEED 👏 TO 👏 KEEP 👏 POINTING 👏 THAT 👏 OUT 👏 EVERY 👏 SINGLE 👏 DAY 👏”

That began an larger discussion in the tweet about logos. The tweet had more than 900 comments by 9 p.m. Eastern Wednesday, more than 10 hours after it was posted.

PBS replied, “Would now be a bad time to let you know that we thought your logo was a bearded dude in an orange hat?”

To which the department commented on the PBS logo of a person’s head — called a “P-Head” — with two facial outlines: “(says the sneezing bald dude)”

An actual bearded man wearing an orange hat tweeted his photo and asked, “When do I get money for my likeness being used?”

The department replied with a GIF showing a person holding a sign that says, “To Me, You Are PERFECT.”

Some suggested the department redesign the logo as an acorn. A tweeter said, “I would buy Official Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Cute Acorn In An Orange Hat merch. Please, @OKWildlifeDept?”

Another tweeter thought the department’s logo design was intentional. The reply to that was a GIF of the late painter Bob Ross, who filmed the PBS TV show “The Joy of Painting” from WIPB in Muncie, Indiana. Among his popular phrases were “let’s add some happy little trees” and — the quote in that GIF — “We don’t make mistakes — we just have happy accidents.”