Difference between revisions of "First Edition Button Guide"

From Dissent
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(First Edition Button Guide. Was only briefly relevant.)
 
(Succession box)
 
Line 3: Line 3:
  
 
The sets were segregated not by topic but by nature.  High importance and popularity buttons, most other buttons, and the abolition buttons.  The idea was to print more copies of Group 1 than Group 2, and to have exactly one set of Group 3 at an event so there would be exactly one ''Abolish the IRS button'', exactly one ''Abolish the ATF'' button, and so on.  This practice was soon abandoned as this was not what anyone but James Gholston wanted to follow.
 
The sets were segregated not by topic but by nature.  High importance and popularity buttons, most other buttons, and the abolition buttons.  The idea was to print more copies of Group 1 than Group 2, and to have exactly one set of Group 3 at an event so there would be exactly one ''Abolish the IRS button'', exactly one ''Abolish the ATF'' button, and so on.  This practice was soon abandoned as this was not what anyone but James Gholston wanted to follow.
 +
 +
{{Start Box}}
 +
{{Succession Box|
 +
before= |
 +
title=LPRC Materials and Events Guides|
 +
years=June 2017 |
 +
after=[[Second Edition Button Guide]]
 +
}}
 +
{{End Box}}
  
  
 
[[Category:Button Guide]]
 
[[Category:Button Guide]]

Latest revision as of 02:16, 19 May 2024

First Edition cover Final 1080px.png

The LPRC's original button guide from 2017. This was a minimal guide with instructions for button sheet usage and images of all then-extant buttons. Nothing more. It was planned to be superseded almost immediately. While it became obsolete soon afterward, efforts to replace it were too labor intensive and time consuming to accomplish until the Mt Sneffels script was created in April 2023.

The sets were segregated not by topic but by nature. High importance and popularity buttons, most other buttons, and the abolition buttons. The idea was to print more copies of Group 1 than Group 2, and to have exactly one set of Group 3 at an event so there would be exactly one Abolish the IRS button, exactly one Abolish the ATF button, and so on. This practice was soon abandoned as this was not what anyone but James Gholston wanted to follow.


Preceded by:
 
LPRC Materials and Events Guides
June 2017
Succeeded by:
Second Edition Button Guide