|
Planning home
Basic Briefing
Resources
2003 Outcomes
Enroll Yourself
Enroll 2004 Event
Working Group
Planning Calendar
Event Calendar
Exploration Stations
Posters
FAQ
Past Events

|
- Center is located on the third floor of Genetics/Biotechnology in room 3130. Their website is http://wiscinfo.doit.wisc.edu/ltde/nmc/bnmc/index.htm phone 608-265-4817
- Anyone at UW can use it. (You don't have to be a biologist)
- You need a UW Requisition number to pay for your poster.
- The rate is $5 per square foot. So a three-by-four-foot poster costs $60.
- The width of the paper is 36 inches but your file should be no wider than 35.5 inches. It can be any length.
- The best program to use to develop your poster is Adobe Illustrator.
- The BNMC software can also print posters from large .jpg files saved by Adobe Photoshop.
- It is specifically recommended that you NOT create your poster in PowerPoint.
- You need to make an appointment in advance to print your poster.
- Allow about 2 hours for printing your first poster, one hour for every poster after that.
- You need to bring your poster file on a zip disk, a cd, the hard drive of your laptop, or place it on a web server to download to BNMC.
- It's a good idea to bring a tube to take your poster away in. BNMC does not provide tubes. A cool kind of tube is something called a "bat tube," developed for storing souvenir baseball bats, but perfect for posters, because it is a clear tube. You don't need to label your poster tubes, because you can see which poster is inside if you store it print-side-out. You can order them online from http://www.creativesportsent.com/suppainpenfo.html, which offered 20 tubes for $80, or one for $5.99.
- For examples of some science posters for the public see http://www.biotech.wisc.edu/postercollection.html
- Save your poster using the "CMYK" color scheme rather than "RGB"
Other tips for posters
- Make everything big
- Don't use too many words. This is not a professional scientific meeting poster, it's a reach-the-public poster. Imagine people are going to view it from a conveyor belt moving by the poster at 2 miles an hour. How much can they absorb in the few seconds they have to look?
- Use the brightest colors you can without making it illegible.
- Break out of rectangularity in terms of how you arrange elements on the poster. Don't do your poster as if it's made from a series of letter-size pieces of paper. Arrange items in circles, arrange them in snake-shapes.
|
 |
 |
| Epson 10000 B printer prints posters up to 3 feet wide. By turning your image on its side (landscape) you can print very large posters. |
 |
| Bat tubes work well for storing and transporting posters. |
| For more information, contact
Ken Smith at 608/262-8637 or
kennethsmith@wisc.edu; or Ellen Maurer at 608/263-4781 or
eamaurer@facstaff.wisc.edu; or see http://www.science.wisc.edu
|
|