This Apple Park T-shirt is black with the Apple Park “loop” logo in the shape of the main “spaceship” building at the Apple Park campus. The loop logo is in the same colors as the classic, multicolor Apple logo.
This shirt was purchased at the Apple Visitor Center Apple Store at Apple Park. Its product number is HLD32LL/A. The shirt is a size XXL, unopened in its original box.
This Apple-logo design t-shirt is curiously labeled “Apple Park T-shirt Black / Rainbow.” The design depicted on the box shows a black t-shirt with a classic, multicolor Apple logo (not the Apple Park logo also offered at this location).
This t-shirt was purchased at the Apple Visitor Center Apple Store at Apple Park. Its product number is HLEW2LL/A. The shirt is a size XXL, unopened in its original box.
This Apple Park T-shirt is black with the Apple Park “loop” logo in the shape of the main “spaceship” building at the Apple Park campus. The loop logo is in the same colors as the classic, multicolor Apple logo.
This shirt was purchased at the Apple Visitor Center Apple Store at Apple Park. Its product number is HLD12LL/A. The shirt is a size L, unopened in its original box.
This Apple Logo T-shirt is black with a classic, multicolor Apple logo. It was purchased at the Apple Visitor Center Apple Store at Apple Park. Its product number is HLEU2LL/A. The shirt is a size XL, unopened in its original box.
This Apple Logo T-shirt is black with a classic, multicolor Apple logo. It was purchased at the Apple Visitor Center Apple Store at Apple Park. Its product number is HLEU2LL/A. The shirt is a size L, unopened in its original box.
While visiting a Chicago-area Apple Store coincidentally on Halloween, I noticed that employees were giving away Apple-logo items to Trick-or-Treaters. I waited until after designated Trick-or-Treat hours were over, spoke to an employee, let him know I was a collector, and asked for one of the “treats.”
The first year I discovered this Halloween Apple-logo item giveaway was around 2013 when Apple was distributing this plastic Apple-logo flashlight in the Old Orchard Apple Store (Skokie, IL).
This flashlight is black with a white Apple logo and is 8 cm long. It includes a key ring in its sealed original package.
This set of floppy disk labels are for 3.5-inch disks and feature the original multicolor Apple logo and dotted lines for writing the contents of the disk. They include the part number 026-2001-C. The back of the stickers display disk safety and use instructions with four pictograms in five languages.
These stickers are sealed in their original packaging and measure 70×75 mm.
An identical set of these stickers are in the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, CA.
This Apple Infinite Loop Tonal Logo t-shirt is black with a black Apple logo. The t-shirt is a size 2XL in the original box. The shirt was purchased at the Apple Store at the Infinite Loop campus in Cupertino, CA. The t-shirt product number is HL012LL/A.
This collection of three buttons is from an Apple Distinguished Educator (ADE) event during which ADEs learned about the “Yes, and…” principle of improvisational comedy, or “improv.”
Improv comedy performers work together to “define the parameters and action of the scene, in a process of co-creation.” An improv performer must accept the premise of another performer (i.e., “yes,”) and then add to it (i.e., “and…”). “It is the responsibility of the other improvisers to accept the offers that their fellow performers make… Accepting an offer is usually accompanied by adding a new offer, often building on the earlier one” (Wikipedia).
Modern improvisational comedy began to be formalized in Chicago, through exercises developed by Viola Spolin, who influenced “the first generation of modern American improvisers at The Compass Players in Chicago, which led to The Second City” (Wikipedia).
At this ADE event, we used the “Yes!…and” idea as a foundation for educational collaboration. Educators worked in small groups with San Francisco-based improv performer/teacher Rebecca Stockley to learn the concept.
One of the white buttons features the Apple Distinguished Educators logo of the time (an iMac with a woodcut design with the Apple Distinguished Educators logotype) and the words Yes!…and, in the Myriad Apple font. Another button features the words Yes!…and, in the Myriad Apple font superimposed over a gray world map on a white button. A third, smaller button with a black background features the words Yes…And! in white in the Gill Sans font (used in the Newton product line from 1993–1998).