Cheap Calendar Magnets

Promotional Calendar Magnets is a manufacturer of the highest quality full-color refrigerator magnets. Let our in-house design team create custom magnets your customers will see every day on the fridge. Whether you are looking for Computer Calendars, Calendar Magnet Pads, wedding magnets or Advertising Business Calendars we will provide you with a personalized magnet that will be noticed.

We are your source for full-color promotional calendar magnets. Spend time browsing to see what we have to offer.

You can personalize your own calendar magnets

Easily change the photos, colors, fonts, and wording on any one of our original designs. Simply choose a design and call our customer service representative.

Life moments are meant to be shared and calendar magnets are a fresh and unique way to spread the joy! Promotional Calendar Magnets quickly become keepsakes and remind family and friends of special memories for years to come.

The average family opens their refrigerator door 20 times per day which yields you great visibility. Positive impressions happen with these fully backed, high quality magnetic calendars.

We have a wide array of magnet sizes and shapes to choose from including business card magnets, calendar magnets, save the date wedding magnets, shape magnets, schedule magnets, etc. Take a look around to find the exact promotional fridge magnets you're looking for. After all, magnets are the most cost effective sales aid money can buy and we're here to help.

What better way to stay top of mind with your clients and customers than with custom promotional and advertising calendar magnets, school calendar magnets, and business related calendar magnets!!  Your company, brand, and/or message will stick around long after the competition's business card has been thrown away and forgotten. 

An advertising tool that really works! Your ad message stays in front of your customer throughout the entire year, so your message costs a mere fraction of a cent per impression. No other advertising item delivers a return-on-investment like a custom imprinted calendar. Leave a lasting impression all year long! A perfect way to keep your name in front of your clients’ faces. This calendar is easily inserted with your invoices, sales leads, and many other mail correspondences!

With Promotional Calendar Magnets you get custom brilliant full-color printing, a high quality laminated finish, strong magnetic material, and no hidden costs. Choose one of the below calendar templates or have our team of graphic artists create your very own custom calendar magnets.  

Use the traditionally successful method of customized calendar magnets and discover new success in which your company image is revealed to have outstanding organizational skills and work flow. Help your consumers remember your dedication to the effective presentation of deadlines and important dates with promotional Calendar With 1 Slanted And 1 Rounded Corner- Image: 2 15/16" X 1 5/8, Calendar: 3" X 3 7/8" - Magnetic Calendar Pad On .019" Th calendar magnets designed to enhance the schedules of your clients and colleagues.

Calendar with 1 slanted and 1 rounded corner- Image: 2 15/16" x 1 5/8, calendar: 3" x 3 7/8" - Magnetic calendar pad on white .019" thick flexible magnet. Great handouts for banks, real estate agents, the automotive industry, medical practices, churches, funeral homes, insurance companies and more. For the home or office, this economical calendar will keep your business in front of customers all year long. Three month calendar tear off pad.

 

Collage Calendar Magnets
Promotional Calendar Magnets
Promotional Calendar Magnets

Back of Calendar Magnet

Back of Calendar Magnets

Calendar Magnets
Cheap Promotional Calendar
Horizontal Calendar Magnets
Cheap Imprinted Calendar Magnets

 

 

A calendar is a system of organizing days for social, religious, commercial, or administrative purposes. This is done by giving names to periods of time, typically days, weeks, months, and years. The name given to each day is known as a date. Periods in a calendar (such as years and months) are usually, though not necessarily, synchronized with the cycle of the sun or the moon. Many civilizations and societies have devised a calendar, usually derived from other calendars on which they model their systems, suited to their particular needs.

A calendar is also a physical device (often paper). This is the most common usage of the word. Other similar types of calendars can include computerized systems, which can be set to remind the user of upcoming events and appointments.

As a subset, calendar is also used to denote a list of particular set of planned events (for example, court calendar).

The English word calendar is derived from the Latin word kalendae, which was the Latin name of the first day of every month.

Calendar systems

A full calendar system has a different calendar date for every day. Thus the week cycle is by itself not a full calendar system; neither is a system to name the days within a year without a system for identifying the years.

The simplest calendar system just counts time periods from a reference date. This applies for the Julian day. Virtually the only possible variation is using a different reference date, in particular one less distant in the past to make the numbers smaller. Computations in these systems are just a matter of addition and subtraction.

Other calendars have one (or multiple) larger units of time.

Calendars that contain one level of cycles:

Calendars with two levels of cycles:

Cycles can be synchronized with periodic phenomena:

Very commonly a calendar includes more than one type of cycle, or has both cyclic and acyclic elements. A lunisolar calendar is synchronized both to the motion of the moon and to the apparent motion of the sun; an example is the Hebrew calendar.

Many calendars incorporate simpler calendars as elements. For example, the rules of the Hebrew calendar depend on the seven-day week cycle (a very simple calendar), so the week is one of the cycles of the Hebrew calendar. It is also common to operate two calendars simultaneously, usually providing unrelated cycles, and the result may also be considered a more complex calendar. For example, the Gregorian calendar has no inherent dependence on the seven-day week, but in Western society the two are used together, and calendar tools indicate both the Gregorian date and the day of week.

The week cycle is shared by various calendar systems (although the significance of special days such as Friday, Saturday, and Sunday varies). Systems of leap days usually do not affect the week cycle. The week cycle was not even interrupted when 10, 11, 12, or 13 dates were skipped when the Julian calendar was replaced by the Gregorian calendar by various countries.

Solar calendars

Main article: Solar calendar

Days used by solar calendars

Solar calendars assign a date to each solar day. A day may consist of the period between sunrise and sunset, with a following period of night, or it may be a period between successive events such as two sunsets. The length of the interval between two such successive events may be allowed to vary slightly during the year, or it may be averaged into a mean solar day. Other types of calendar may also use a solar day.

Calendar reform

Main article: Calendar reform

There have been a number of proposals for reform of the calendar, such as the World Calendar, International Fixed Calendar and Holocene calendar. The United Nations considered adopting such a reformed calendar for a while in the 1950s, but these proposals have lost most of their popularity.

Lunar Calendars

Not all calendars use the solar year as a unit. A lunar calendar is one in which days are numbered within each lunar phase cycle. Because the length of the lunar month is not an even fraction of the length of the tropical year, a purely lunar calendar quickly drifts against the seasons, which don't vary much near the equator. It does, however, stay constant with respect to other phenomena, notably tides. An example is the Islamic calendar. Alexander Marshack, in a controversial reading, believed that marks on a bone baton (c. 25,000 BC) represented a lunar calendar. Other marked bones may also represent lunar calendars. Similarly, Michael Rappenglueck believes that marks on a 15,000-year old cave painting represent a lunar calendar.

Lunisolar calendars

A lunisolar calendar is a lunar calendar that compensates by adding an extra month as needed to realign the months with the seasons. An example is the Hebrew calendar which uses a 19-year cycle.

Calendar subdivisions

Nearly all calendar systems group consecutive days into "months" and also into "years". In a solar calendar a year approximates Earth's tropical year (that is, the time it takes for a complete cycle of seasons), traditionally used to facilitate the planning of agricultural activities. In a lunar calendar, the month approximates the cycle of the moon phase. Consecutive days may be grouped into other periods such as the week.

Because the number of days in the tropical year is not a whole number, a solar calendar must have a different number of days in different years. This may be handled, for example, by adding an extra day (29 February) in leap years. The same applies to months in a lunar calendar and also the number of months in a year in a lunisolar calendar. This is generally known as intercalation. Even if a calendar is solar, but not lunar, the year cannot be divided entirely into months that never vary in length.

Cultures may define other units of time, such as the week, for the purpose of scheduling regular activities that do not easily coincide with months or years. Many cultures use different baselines for their calendars' starting years. For example, the year in Japan is based on the reign of the current emperor: 2006 was Year 18 of the Emperor Akihito.

Other calendar types

Arithmetic and astronomical calendars

An astronomical calendar is based on ongoing observation; examples are the religious Islamic calendar and the old religious Jewish calendar in the time of the Second Temple. Such a calendar is also referred to as an observation-based calendar. The advantage of such a calendar is that it is perfectly and perpetually accurate. The disadvantage is that working out when a particular date would occur is difficult.

An arithmetic calendar is one that is based on a strict set of rules; an example is the current Jewish calendar. Such a calendar is also referred to as a rule-based calendar. The advantage of such a calendar is the ease of calculating when a particular date occurs. The disadvantage is imperfect accuracy. Furthermore, even if the calendar is very accurate, its accuracy diminishes slowly over time, owing to changes in Earth's rotation. This limits the lifetime of an accurate arithmetic calendar to a few thousand years. After then, the rules would need to be modified from observations made since the invention of the calendar.

 

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