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 With the Back-to-School season in full swing, Masafi Mineral Water Company has launched a brighter version of its kids packaging labels by introducing six new cartoon characters that has further enhanced its reputation for developing unique world-class packaging.
Masafi, which created a big splash in the mineral water sector last August by creating and introducing its own set of cartoon characters, has gone further by launching a newer version of the kids packaging complete with more lovable characters.
The new packaging is also aimed at raising more awareness among children on the importance of drinking pure and natural mineral water like Masafi to stay strong and healthy, and the need to avoid drinking adulterated water plus beverages that are harmful to children.
Masafi, the leading producer of bottled mineral water in the Gulf, is leading current region wide efforts to promote the need to drink at least three litres of water regularly every day to overcome fatigue, dehydration, and help prevent a number of illnesses that can occur anytime of the year in a region where summer temperatures can rise to over 40 degrees Celsius for more than four months.
The new innovative packaging for children features colourful characters named Toto the turtle, Rinho the rhinoceros, Jami the camel, Octo the octopus, Flip and Fi
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 Subtitled "100 Years Of Bibendum", this new book, translated from the French language version, has been released to celebrate 100 years of one of the most famous motoring advertising images. This book celebrates the life and work of this very familiar figure, and is full of wonderful pictures & illustrations.
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 Breaking with tradition, the U.S. Postal Service has approved stamps bearing the likeness of a living person: you.
Stamps.com today announces a service that allows people to design their own postage -- from kids to cats to corporate logos -- on their computers.
"It makes mailing a little more exciting," says Stamps.com CEO Ken McBride.
The Santa Monica, Calif.-based company received exclusive permission from USPS to test their product, dubbed PhotoStamps.
A sheet of 20 self-adhesive, 37-cent PhotoStamps costs $16.99, more than twice the $7.40 cost of a sheet of traditional First Class stamps. (There's also a $2.99-per-order shipping and handling charge.) The personalized stamps also are available in other denominations, including 23-cent postcard (20 for $13.99) and $3.85 1-pound Priority Mail (20 for $89.99).
The process is simple: Log on to photostamps.com, upload an image, edit the design, place an order. The stamps arrive in four to seven business days. Next to the design is a bar code and unique serial number to prevent counterfeiting.
PhotoStamps fall under the USPS regulations for metered mail, so they are exempt from regular-stamps rules such as no living people can be featured and those dead must be gone for 10 years (except for historic and presidential stamps).
But there are PhotoStamp limits: no
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 The Adobe Design Achievement Awards celebrates student achievement that assimilates the powerful convergency of technology with the creative arts industry. Nearly 1,000 students from 160 schools in the United States, Canada, and the U.K. submitted over 1,400 entries to this year's competition. Winners were chosen in seven creative categories, representing work by some of the most talented and promising student graphic designers, illustrators, digital filmmakers, and computer artists from leading art and design schools.
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 Scott hansen's apartment looks like a graphic artist lives there: there's lots of white, his neatly framed posters are hung just so, and the two-monitor workspace is immaculate. But when I visit his bathroom, the quirky warmth that drives Hansen's work as ISO 50 displays itself in the form of a guttering candle that provides just enough light to take aim.
Hansen's balance of the clean lines, sleek pragmatism, and an animating organic flavor have quickly propelled the 26-year-old Sacramento, CA resident into the design limelight. In addition to the work on his www.iso50.com web site, most of which was done either for friends or just for fun, Hansen has created for publications like Computer Arts and has been featured on sites like Styleboost and Ultrashock. He's certainly come a long way from playing on his parents' computers when he was a kid.
"I always messed around with Printshop Pro, some little DOS program, but I didn't get into graphic graphics until a college friend lent me a copy of Photoshop," says Hansen as we sit in his apartment, watching rain pound leaves off the trees in downtown Sacramento. "I was going to University of San Francisco at the time, and then I came back to Sacramento at Sac State and I just started building web sites for fun. An old friend of mine hooked me up with a software company downtown as a [graphic] designer and I started doing freel
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