In a world where life moves at a breakneck pace, it's easy to let cherished memories slip through the sands of time. Memory books offer a beautiful and tangible way to preserve moments that matter the most in your life. Whether it's a family vacation, a wedding, a milestone birthday, or a simple day spent with loved ones, memory books are designed to help you capture and hold onto those precious times forever. Each page is a canvas waiting to be filled with your unique story, ensuring that the memories you make today are preserved for generations to come.
SITOSO
Design Services
Toronto, Ontario 14 followers
We create engaging and meaningful content experiences.
About us
Your corporate messages go a long way to inspire. Increase its reach and engagement by rethinking your publications. Create your publications to look great on any device. Convert your print magazines to a responsive digital format. Let us help you create a sales and marketing funnel to automate and integrate some of the functions.
- Website
-
https://www.sitoso.com
External link for SITOSO
- Industry
- Design Services
- Company size
- 2-10 employees
- Headquarters
- Toronto, Ontario
- Type
- Self-Owned
- Founded
- 2017
- Specialties
- Digital marketing, Digital publishing, Business communications, Newsletters, Email campaigns, Brochures, Annual reports, White papers, Digital design, Responsive design, Infographics, Animation, Website design, and Graphic design
Locations
-
Primary
Toronto, Ontario, CA
-
Ajax, Ontario, CA
Employees at SITOSO
Updates
-
Do you put the date, or the month before, the year? How do you figure out 12/12/2012? As a designer of developer you will be making the decision on how to structure the date sequence. Magazines have policies and style guides around this. I prefer the date, followed by the month, and then the year. Logically, I cannot think of any other sequence. But we all come across various combinations. Some prefer the month followed by the date. I have seen options where the sequence starts with the year. Some prefer numbers only, some spell out the month in between (12 December 2012). Yet others add a coma (December 12, 2012). Whey leave it for interpretation? I started using a less frustrating option. Use the first two letters of the month and plug it in between. For the four months with similar first letters combinations, skip the second letter. So one may use: JA, FE, MR, AP, MY, JN, JL, AU, SE, OC, NO, DE. The combination we started with will read either 12/DE/2012 or DE/12/2012. Have you see this usage anywhere?
This content isn’t available here
Access this content and more in the LinkedIn app