Complex Systems Summer School 2017-TShirts
From Santa Fe Institute Events Wiki
Complex Systems Summer School 2017 |
Every year we have a T-shirt design contest where CSSS Students create designs (relevant to the summer school) Please use this space to post your T-shirt design below. For simplicity's sake required for rapid turnaround due to the Independence Day holiday , t-shirts will be printed on Haynes Nano Smoke Grey shirts with white ink. Designs should work within these constraints.
If anybody would like a high resolution SFI logo, please see JP.
Please submit T-shirt designs here by the afternoon of Monday, 19 June. Voting will be conducted that afternoon.
Fractal NM Concept
Front
Back
Suggestions
please leave comments here (if any)
Increase the Throughput/Networks/Project Names
Front
Same as Fractal Concept design (SFI logo)
Back
T-SHIRT SFI Chaos/Networks/Etc
Iterations of the design
- New Mexico flag symbol on sleeve
- SFI CSSS 2017 on front w/ Julia Set
- Back - version 1
- Back - version 2
File:D.Rao tshirt final sleeve.png File:D.Rao tshirt final front.png File:D.Rao tshirt final-tri.png File:D.Rao tshirt final-dia.png
Think Complexity
Front
Same as the concept design
Back
"clean-up" art of SFI logo
File:Parts resize3.png
The idea of the art of clean-up is basically dissecting things and sorting all the parts in a very tidy way (see examples[1]). This idea of clean-up art somewhat coincides with the concept of complex systems.
Hello on Earth
SELECTION OF T-SHIRT IDEAS - CSSS STUDENTS AS A NETWORK DIAGRAM + NETWORK INSPIRED FONT
Drawings by Briony / Network diagrams created by Uzay / Initial tech support from Catriona
Information based on data from CSSS student applications to SFI
Nodes are us (participants of CSSS2017). Node shapes depend on gender. Edges are formed according to common 'field of study',
same 'citizenship', common 'current country of residence', same 'institution'. And it looks like butterfly.
A key to nodes and edges could be added.
CSSS 2017 info could also be added in small text below the diagram.
Alternative arrangement of nodes/edges