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LOGO REQUIREMENTS

How your logo will be used Please DO • Print: The official TAB Look Book. (300dpi) • Provide a vector (.ai) file. These types of files are scalable to any size we need. • Video: On the big screen during the show. (72dpi) • If an .ai file isn’t available send the largest logo • Online: Featured on our website. (72dpi) possible at 300dpi. The original file is always your best choice.

Logo Requirements • File type does matter. Our first choice is a vector (.ai) file, otherwise any hi-res large format file is acceptable. • 300 dpi file, at least 20 inches in width.* * Your logo will be used in several ways and requires Don’t a large size that can be scaled down. • Don’t steal or borrow logos from the internet; they are not hi-res files. PREFERRED FILE FORMATS • Don’t simply resize a logo file in Photoshop; this does not work and your logo will look poor on the big screen and in print. Illustrator (.ai) Photoshop (.psd, .png)

.pdf

Deadline February 1st* * Get your logo in early to guarantee placement. We The lo-res image on the right looks great at its normal can not guarantee placement in the Look Book for size (100%), but when we enlarge the logo, it looks any logo received after February 1st. We can not choppy. You can see why enlarging lo-res images gives guarantee placement on the big screen, during the blurry results. This look is called “pixelated” because show, for any logo received after February 14th. you can distinguish each pixel, in a block pattern. XXVI

WHEN PEOPLE STARTED DYING

COMMENTARY FROM AIDS IN THE 1980s AND FOUND THEMSELVES IGNORED BY THE AMERICAN GOVERNMENT AND PUBLIC, A BRAVE GROUP OF MEN AND WOMEN STEPPED UP TO LITERALLY FIGHT FOR THEIR LIVES. Style Guide

The world was hit hard by AIDS in the 1980s.

"Readers d’un certain âge will recall how bleak and ghastly SILENCE = DEATH THE BENEFICIARIES COMMENTARY LOOKS it was. To those of you who were not around, I can only

say this: You have no idea how lucky you are." The world

lost , Moschino, Patrick Kelly, Angel Estrada, THEFASHION BENEFICIARIES COMMENTARY LOOKS Through their unique political, social and radical activism, these individu- No.26 Isaia, Adrian Cartmell, Clovis Ruffin, and so als made a difference. They raised awareness, they fought for protection No.26 No.26 No.26 many more. "When AIDS struck, the fashion world and benefits, they changed how the FDA ran clinical trials, and they im- rallied as never before: Kenneth Cole, ,

ACTIVISTS FASHION THE FASHION ACTIVISTS BENEFICIARIES LOOKS proved the quality of life for those who were living with HIV. The impact of FASHION ACTIVISTS ACTIVISTS and all did their bit. ... their activism is immeasurable. ¶ Whether you are an audience member, The philanthropic effort was unprecedented. And KATHLEENKATHLEEN model, volunteer, sponsor or donor, your engagement with TAB means Fine Navajo Weaving

MORGANMORGAN pip’s the effort continues." Designers from New York, that YOU ARE AN ACTIVIST! Wear this badge proudly. The AIDS ac- London, Paris, San Francisco, Los Angeles and tivists of the last 30+ years changed the course of the epidemic, and all over the world still donate their looks to fash- IN THIS ISSUE: you can too. Keep fighting for what you care about and TAB will do the ion shows like the Telluride AIDS Benefit annu- The Cause P.2 same. Together, we can fight the stigma and apathy surrounding HIV and ally to support the cause. Ending AIDS P.4 AIDS – and strive for a much needed end to this preventable epidemic. Creating Space P.9

DEPARTMENT DEPARTMENT // FIGHT This excerpt is from Simon Doonan’s DEPARTMENT DEPARTMENT // FASHION DEPARTMENT // FASHION Providing Opportunity P.10 book The Asylum: A Collage of Couture Activism P.12 Reminiscences … and Hysteria. Shop victoriously P.14 Style Guide P.16 aidsbenefit.org aidsbenefit.org aidsbenefit.org 1. ACT UP protesters in front of City Hall in New York in 1992.

(New York Daily News Archive/NY Daily News via Getty Images) 2.

XXVI XXVI Members of AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT UP) hold up signs Founding Member Ronald Gilmer, Board Chairman Matthew Hintermeister, LACK OF COLOR hat available at DOWN TO EARTH and charcoal pinstripe trouser from RAILS Pg. and placards during the Gay and Lesbian Pride march in New York Pg. Pg.

02 Executive Director Sarah Gluckstern City, June 26, 1988. (The New York Historical Society/Getty Images) XXVI 16 (Cover image: TOPO DESIGNS tech pant TIBI crochet top available at HERITAGE.) XXVI 23