Date: Mon, 29 Mar 1999 12:14:46 +1200 From: "Dan Langille" <junkmale@xtra.co.nz> To: Nocturne <dpilgrim@uswest.net> Cc: advocacy@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: Logo merchandise Message-ID: <19990329001552.XHER4957949.mta1-rme@wocker> In-Reply-To: <36FEC37B.BBE26454@uswest.net>
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On 28 Mar 99, at 16:04, Nocturne wrote: > Dan Langille wrote: > >On 28 Mar 99, at 15:18, Nocturne wrote: > > > >> Dan Langille wrote: > >> > > >> > On 28 Mar 99, at 8:23, Andrew I. Arbuckle wrote: > >> > > >> > > Even a white T-Shirt requires dye, otherwise it would be a grayish color. I > >> > > would thing a dime would suffice for the dye, and something for handling, > >> > > but $4.00 seems excessive! > >> > > >> > On a green-clean note, why not have unbleached cotton? It's not white, > >> > looks good, and doesn't go gray as it gets older <grin>. > >> > >> I don't like white t-shirts, it's hard to keep them looking clean and > >> new. I prefer that mottled grey color... (or is that the unbleached > >> cottom colour?) > > > >OOPs. premature send. > > > >Grey? As in what you often see many sweat pants and sweat shirts? No, > >not that grey. I just rang my neighbour, who's a colour expert, to find > >out about this. Unbleached cotton is more of a cream colour. > > The grey I'm talking about commonly found in athletic t-shirts. Hanes > and Jockey both make them in packs of three. It's a softer neutral > colour (white can be rather harsh and clash with darker colours.) Fair enough. But the main reason I mentioned unbleached cotton was environmental. -- Dan Langille The FreeBSD Diary http://www.FreeBSDDiary.com/freebsd To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-advocacy" in the body of the message
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