Farmers Almanac

Current Moon Phase

Waxing Gibbous
82% of full

Farmers Almanac
The 2013 Farmers Almanac
Farmers' Almanac

The 2013 Farmers’ Almanac Promotional Edition

Get the Flash Player to see this player.
2013 Farmers' Almanac Promotional Edition

The Promotional Farmers’ Almanac is customized with your brand on the cover.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Farmers’ Almanac Promotional Edition is available only for the U.S.

Whether you want to thank your customers, wish them happy holidays, or entice them to visit to a new location, the Farmers’ Almanac is the marketing vehicle for you.

Our promotional version of the Farmers’ Almanac contains the same famous long-range weather outlooks, gardening and fishing advice, articles and tips, but also offers your company the ability to customize the front AND back covers with your logo, message, directions, special offers, or whatever you want.

The best part is, you’re the only advertiser in this version! The 2012 Farmers’ Almanac promotional version features:

• 96 pages of Farmers’ Almanac content, with NO advertisements, except your own custom content.
• Generous advertising space – Cover ad space front: 3 5/8″ x 1 1/4″; Rear & Inside: 4 1/4″ x 7″ Standard imprint color: Black. Publication size closed: 8 1/4″ h x 5 1/4″ w.
• Printed on 10% post-consumer recycled/ recyclable paper.
• Options: Extra advertising pages can be inserted at an additional cost.
• Usually ships in just 12 business days.
• Need your Almanacs extra fast? No problem! Our Express `Nac ships in just 9 working days! Ask one of our sales representatives about pricing and quantity availability.
• Minimum Order is 500.

2013 Farmers’ Almanac Promotional Edition Pricing:
(Price includes front cover and back cover black imprint.)
Quantities and cost per unit: 500-$2.15, 750-$1.81, 1000-$1.68, 2500-$1.46, 5000-$1.32
For more information, pricing on higher quantities, a spec sample, or pricing with four-color imprint, please fill out our contact form.

 

If you notice a hole in the upper left-hand corner of your Farmers' Almanac, don't return it to the store! That hole isn't a defect; it's a part of history. Starting with the first edition of the Farmers' Almanac in 1818, readers used to nail holes into the corners to hang it up in their homes, barns, and outhouses (to provide both reading material and toilet paper). In 1910, the Almanac's publishers began pre-drilling holes in the corners to make it even easier for readers to keep all of that invaluable information (and paper) handy.

qrcode