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Submitting Information
For the
Website
Submissions to the website should be sent to info@performingartsburlington.com .
Images: provide
jpgs, eps, psd or tifs
For the Newsletter
Attention Members!
Deadlines for Information for Performing Arts Burlington’s quarterly newsletter:
Summer Edition 2008
Months covered: June, July and August
Information to Performing Arts Burlington by May 2
Mail distribution completed June 1
Fall Edition 2008
Months covered: September, October and November
Information to Performing Arts Burlington by August 1
Mail distribution completed September 1
Winter Edition 2008
Months covered: December, January and February
Information to Performing Arts Burlington by November 3
Mail distribution completed December 1
Spring Edition 2008
Months covered: March, April and May
Information to Performing Arts Burlington by February 1
Mail distribution completed March 1
Have a story to tell, please send an email to Paul Mitchell, paulfmitchell@sympatico.ca
Have an event to publicize on in the newsletter or on the PAB website, please send an email to info@performingartsburlington.com
Click here for complete What’s On listings.
Click here to submit your event information
Send stories or news to the editor, Paul Mitchell at
paulfmitchell@sympatico.ca
Images:
Photos
supplied in digital format, by email or on disc, should meet these
requirements.
Failure
to follow these specifications
may
disqualify your image from being published.
Digital Camera:
DO NOT resize your digital image to make it small
for emailing. This drastically reduces quality and limitations
to the size we can reproduce.
| Scans: |
- Must be 300 dpi at the size you hope your
image to appear.
- We can NOT make it larger than it is received.
- Formats Accepted: JPG, EPS, PSD or TIF.
- DO NOT place in Word, PowerPoint or any
other programs.
- Platform: Windows/PC
- Disk type: CD or DVD
- We DO NOT except photos taken
off a website, the resolution is too low.
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| Important File Type Information: |
- The EPS file format is the sharpest file format available
and is stays sharp when resized.
- The GIF file format is used
extensively for Internet graphics. GIF's, using this
file format allows you to insert the graphic onto a web page in a more
seamless design.
- The JPEG file format is used extensively
for Internet graphics. The JPG file format is a "lossy" format.
That means each time the JPG image is opened, manipulated
in any way and then resaved, the image's quality will
degrade.
- The TIF file format was created for photographs, but unlike
the JPG it does not lose information or introduce noise when
resaving the image.
The TIF file format
works well for print publications.
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