WordCamp New York City 2009

November 14–15, 2009
...was awesome!

Contest: Design the Logo for WordCamp NYC

The Manhattan skyline? The Statue of Liberty? King Kong on the Empire State Building? What can you come up with to visually represent New York City? And can it incorporate a [W]?

The “official” WordCamp logo uses the “W” mark and text that says WordCamp. Cities around the world have used this logo, plastering it on web sites, t-shirts, programs, etc. In contrast, some WordCamp organizers create event logos that visually represent their location or community personality. New York City has more personality than most places, and our community has more design talent than anywhere else on the planet, so we should have a badass logo that will put all the rest to shame. A logo so cool that you want to wear the t-shirt every day for the rest of your natural life, after which you donate it to the museum of cool t-shirts.

If you’re a designer, illustrator, sketch artist, or generally creative person, consider designing the WordCamp NYC logo! If your logo is chosen, it will appear on hundreds of attendee t-shirts, on web sites receiving millions of hits, and on all the printed materials at the actual event in October. To allow more people to participate, we’ll hold a logo contest and let our community vote to choose the best one.

The Rules:
You must incorporate the official W into your design. Vector files are available here.

No pornographic or profane images.

Your logo has to look okay if printed in black and white. You can use color, just make sure that turning it grayscale won’t ruin it, since all the printed matter will be in black and white. Bear in mind that every extra color makes the t-shirts cost more.

You will have two weeks to work on the logo idea. If you have a simple idea, two weeks should be enough time to get a reasonably finished mockup. If you have a complicated idea that involves a lot of custom illustration, a rough draft/sketch will be acceptable at this point if it is accompanied by a description of what differences would be in the final logo.

If you have some good ideas but can’t draw to save your life, post your ideas in the comments here, and maybe another community member will like your suggestion enough to draw it. If you’re working on a logo and want feedback, feel free to post here in the comments and link to the image file on your own web site.

Logos will be officially entered into the contest with the delivery of a .jpg or .png to wordcampnyc at gmail dot com no later than 7am  on May 28, 2009.

Submissions will be reviewed by the organizers for compliance with the rules (incorporated the W, no porn, etc.), with those that pass muster being posted for the community to vote on them. Voting will last for three days.

The WordCamp NYC organizers will make the final selection based on a combination of community votes and technical considerations (does the logo still look good at both small and large sizes, does it grayscale well, will it be easy to print on a t-shirt, etc.). The winner of the contest will be announced on June 6, 2009

The winning designer can take a few days or a week to do any last polishing they didn’t have time to finish, and then we’ll put the logo into production. A “Logo designed by” credit (with link to your web site) will appear on the WordCamp NYC web site.

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