Whether it's your first Bonnaroo or you’re a music festival veteran, we welcome you to Inforoo.
Here you'll find info about artists, rumors, camping tips, and the infamous Roo Clues. Have a look around then create an account and join in the fun. See you at Bonnaroo!!
This word also has a underground meaning once you break it down. Let’s take “Bonn” for example and it actually turns into the word “Bone”. We all know gays use this word to describe the action of when they are fecal fisting their Cuban cabana boy at their sex bath house parties. Now let’s look at Roo, “Roo” is short for “Kangaroo”.So put the full true message together and you get“Bone a Kangaroo
Post by jaina_SOLO on Jan 13, 2011 17:37:13 GMT -5
I would suggest not getting the calendars printed out at staples, office depot, or anything like that. I'm an art major and have to get various things printed out constantly (not to mention the quality my instructors expect and the small amount of cash i have to spend) and those places always seem to mess it up in some way. They tend to always guarantee that a simple project will become a big headache. One place that I have been able to get prints done right the first time and pretty cheap is Sam's Club, oddly enough. So I would suggest checking their prices on their website. Good luck getting it put together though! I'm sure it's gonna be AMAZING no matter what!
Post by plasticpepper on Feb 7, 2011 22:46:32 GMT -5
Ooh, just found this thread now...idk where you guys are at with the plans for a 2011 calendar, but I am totally down for the 2012 one! If we take pictures at Roo, I think I want dibs on the obligatory wet t-shirt pic....in the fountain, of course!
As for printing, I make/print probably a couple dozen calendars a year and I'll totally vouch for Kinkos (FedEx Office, now) - IF you submit them online. I've done enough printing with Kinkos to know that there's pretty much nothing they can't screw up if you actually go to the store to have it printed, BUT they have different printers that aren't available at the stores and those are what they use to print their new style calendars if you order them online. Those printers print all the way to the edge of the paper, so it's all done electronically and you don't have to worry about the paper feeding a little crookedly or someone cutting it less than perfectly. I've done dozens of calendars that way and never seen the slightest bit of error when it comes to alignment and the trim and all that stuff. The base price is usually $20 before tax, but they do go on sale sometimes, I managed to get all of mine this year done for $12.84 plus tax which was awesome. And the standard shipping is free and pretty speedy.
One bit of advice, though - whoever is handling all the pictures needs to make sure the aspect ratio is right. I'm pretty sure Fedex USED to just crop them a bit if the aspect ratio wasn't perfect, but with mine this year they just shrunk them to fit so I ended up with thin white strips at the top and bottom of each picture for the first batch I did. So just make sure they're cropped into 8.5x11 proportions - the actual dimensions won't matter, but the proportions need to be right.