T-Shirt Design Contest - $350 Prize - Contest ends on 1st March 2008
Our firm, SunNight Solar, is changing the way the World lights the night with our innovative solar powered products - replacing kerosene lanterns in developing countries and providing an economic and environmentally superior option over single use battery powered flashlights for the rest of the planet.
Our program BoGo Buy one/Give one has been featured in the New York Times, Newsweek, the Dallas Morning News, Fox News and a number of other media outlets. We have provided lights to thousands of people in the developing world, changing lives through education, improving lives by improving the economic conditions for the bottom of the pyramid consumer (no more costs for nightly kerosene) and by providing an inexpensive and sustainable light source for people who previously waited in darkness for the night to end.
We reduce the amount of carbon expended into the atmosphere one kerosene lantern emits 100 kilos of carbon annually reduce the number of batteries in landfills, slow deforestation, reduce the number of injuries from fires, improve security for women and children at night, reduce the amount of people developing cancer by removing the contamination of fumes from fires and kerosene and improve the overall quality of life for everyone on the planet.
Here are the contest rules:
Create T-Shirt design that would help us with our cause $350.00.
Payment will be via PayPal and winner must agree to have her/his name posted on our web site.
Submit hi-res jpg file to contest@bogolight.com, include T-Shirt Contest in subject line
All submissions become the full property of SunNight Solar Enterprises
No compensation of any kind will be paid to any contributor other than the $350.00 noted above.
SunNight Solar reserves the right to use, display, and run any and all submissions upon electronic transfer to SunNight Solar without any notice or compensation of any nature to the submitter. Additional information about our company, our mission and products can be found on our website
[link].
Good Luck and Make a Difference!
Devious Comments
Specific rules ( like colour for the fabric ) ? Can you be more specific about what you consider high-res ? I can guess that printing on fabric ask for lower resolution that on paper, hence no really so fine details, but that's all.
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Me ? A signature ? Never.
Also the resolution of the image submitted should be enough to be printed it on the T-Shirt.
Hope that helps.
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Participate in our new contest-win cash prize and change the world. More info here:[link] or here:[link] Good Luck and Make a Difference!
What I said is "enough for a t-shirt print " doesnt mean anything by itself unless you know about T-shirt printing.
I, for exemple, can tell you that 15 dpi is enough for an large ad poster, 75 dpi could do for low quality newspaper, 100 to 150 dpi to most newspaper,
150 to 200 is good for a magazine, and for an art book you can use 300 dpi to 400 dpi.
I am sure the society that print the t-shirt could tell you about what they need. Too finely detailed things may or may not print correctly on fabric I guess.
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Me ? A signature ? Never.
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Participate in our new contest-win cash prize and change the world. More info here:[link] or here:[link] Good Luck and Make a Difference!
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