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Printed Pens: January 2006

Tuesday, January 24, 2006

 

Floating Pens –whatever next!?



Floating pens have been around for 50 years, they are produced by a Danish company. Apparently people who receive these pens keep them even after the ink has run dry – how effective is that for a business gift or for an advertising campaign?

It is said that a printed pen is the most commonly used advertising item. If that is true then it is also the most cost effective incentive business gift. A printed plastic pen or a printed pencil priced at less than 15p on a quantity of 1000 represents fantastic value for money. Printed pens have both longevity and usefulness. If they are also good to hold and attractive to look at they will be used every day. See some of our ergonomic designs on this website, call us for more details or email to
sales@juon.co.uk

Wednesday, January 18, 2006

 

A salutary lesson for us all



This little news item below has a message of all of us in the printed promotional goods business!

Fire station wall gaffe
A fire station's wall had to be rebuilt because it was the wrong shade of red. The new wall is now in place - and it looks exactly the same as the old one, according to the Daily Mirror. The work was part of an unfinished project to build a £6m fire station in Gateshead. A council official stopped brickies building the 20-metre long, six-metre high wall because under planning rules it had to be made from dark red bricks. The ones they were using had a hint of orange.
Secretary Ken Walters, secretary of the Tyne and Wear Fire Brigades Union, slammed the privately funded building project. He fumed: "If they can't even guarantee to use the right bricks then what guarantees can we have for fire safety?"
The project's building firm Jarvis paid for the rebuild, saying it had made an "oversight".
Rita Dobson, 60, who works in the Springfield Hotel opposite the fire station, said of the identical new wall: "I can't believe it."
This sad story highlights why we must always ask for a Pantone colour reference before going to print. What one person perceives as ‘pillar box red’ may be seen by another as orange or pink and if we print the ‘wrong’ pillar box red on our customer’s pens or mouse mats or mugs then that customer is going to be very upset. Trying to explain how such an error occurred is not going to be easy – take my word for it -
so the watchwords are ‘PANTONE REFERENCE PLEASE’

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