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2023 Code4Lib T-Shirt Design Competition

1,824 bytes added, 14:46, 10 January 2023
Added link to voting form
Voting is now open for the Code4Lib 2023 T-shirt design! The winning logo will be featured on the front of this year's conference t-shirt. Voting will close on Friday, January 20, 2023.
 
You can cast your vote here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScahcvQUOQ1EDp7SnNNENoqGocjjCn55weBhyVtmEAlmfkJIQ/viewform. The voting form will require you to log in with a Google account to ensure one vote per person.
== Details ==
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== Submissions ==
Person name Paul Fuller:[[Image:image1.png]]
Submission description[[Image:fuller.png|600px]] It's a slightly simplified version of the Princeton, NJ tree logo with the text "code{4}lib 2023 princeton, nj" wrapping around the circular tree.
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Person name Alicia Cozine[[Image:cozine.jpg|600px]] Roaring tiger with a wired computer mouse in its mouth. Black on a white background works, but I think it would look great as a black design on an orange shirt. Design by Alicia Cozine, artistic execution by Lydia Major. -------------------------- Mat Kelly: [[Image:kelly.png|600px]] Primarily consists of a single typeface of the words "Code4Lib 2023" with some customization in the placement. Monochrome, so would also work if inverted. -------------------------- Anson Parker: [[Image:parker1.png|600px]] A dall-e illustration of "a black and white design of a librarian programming a data science project" -------------------------- Anson Parker: [[Image:parker2.png|600px]] Another dall-e illustration of "a black and white design of a librarian programming a data science project" -------------------------- Anson Parker: [[Image:parker3.png|600px]] One final dall-e illustration of "a black and white design of a librarian programming a data science project" -------------------------- Chuck McCallum: [[Image:image1mccallum.png|600px]]
Submission descriptionI've heard a lot about DALL-E etc., but hadn't signed up for an account. I like to draw, and don't want a computer to do it for me... but anagrams seemed like an interesting set of prompts. As it turns out, it takes a lot of text massaging and extrapolation to get good line art for a t-shirt, and even then there are often strange unidentifiable lines and blobs that you'd want to manually erase.
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