Vote for your favourite Nokia Lumia 820 shell design and win a Nokia Lumia 820 and Fatboy Wireless Charging Pillow
Nokia Facebook has a competition where three people, (one of which is gonna be you right?
) can win a Nokia Lumia 820 and a Fatboy Wireless Charging Pillow.
All you have to do is vote on your favourite new 820 shell design.
Pick a design, and enter your details.
VOTE AND WIN A NOKIA LUMIA 820
Take part in the voting and get the chance to win a Nokia Lumia 820. 3 lucky winners will get a Nokia Lumia 820 with the winning design printed on the wireless charging shell, and a Fatboy wireless charging pillow.
The winning designs will be announced at Social Media Week NYC on the 21st of February 2013, and then announced here. The top 3 designs will be showcased and made available in limited quantities of 50 pieces each.
THE JURY THAT SELECTED THE FINALISTS
Anthony Dalby
VP Brand Experience Design, Nokia
Anthony has 23 year’s design experience with the last 12 years spent at Nokia. During his time at Nokia, he’s been Director of Product Design and worked on the world’s first true smart phone. He now heads Nokia’s creative teams with a focus on the overall consumer experience.
Jo Gulliver
Art Editor, Computer Arts
Jo is Computer Arts’ PPA Designer of the Year-nominated art editor. Her day typically involves commissioning cover art from the world’s most exciting designers and photoshoots with the biggest names in design. www.computerarts.co.uk
Adriana Andujar
Head of Creative + Copy, Luxus
Adriana is a multidisciplinary designer, seeker of adventure and a terrible karaoke singer. She has worked on a huge array of award-winning interactive, video and traditional media projects for start-ups, small boutique firms and Fortune 500 companies. She currently lives and works in London. Her past clients include: BMW, HBO, Hertz, Durex, Iittala, Heineken and The History Channel.www.luxus.fi / www.adriana-andujar.eu
Glenn Garriock
Graphic Designer, Atelier 1A
Originally from Scotland, Glenn is a graphic designer who now runs Atelier 1A, a small collaborative design studio in northern Germany. As co-founder & editor of FormFiftyFive, which showcases inspiring creative work from around the world, he’s constantly on the look-out for new talent. Glenn works mostly with start-ups, enjoying the freedom of a blank canvas.www.formfiftyfive.com
Category: Competition, Lumia, Nokia
About the Author (Author Profile)
Hey, thanks for reading my post. My name is Jay and I'm a medical student at the University of Manchester. When I can, I blog here at mynokiablog.com and tweet now and again @jaymontano. We also have a twitter and facebook accounts @mynokiablog and Facebook.com/mynokiablog. Check out the tips, guides and rules for commenting >>click<< Contact us at tips(@)mynokiablog.com or email me directly on jay[at]mynokiablog.comComments (7)
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Sites That Link to this Post
- Meet the winners of the Nokia Lumia 820 Design Challenge : My Nokia Blog | February 22, 2013









Crap… Another competition I can’t enter since I don’t have a FB account… Uh well…
It is really bad that almost all Nokia GiveAway competitions and votings are based on a facebook account.
I do not use facebook and will not, but I am a big Nokiafan and would definitely like to take part.
I think the competition is designed to increase facebook/social media interaction for Nokia. Makes it easier to communicate with the next set of people.
Ideally, they’d allow other forms of entry, or have more competitions for those who don’t use facebook.
I guess, one could create an account just for the purpose of entering things like this and otherwise continue not to use facebook.
That “Competition-Account” is a nice idea indeed. But I think since they may see your empty profile they think of fake-account for that purpose.
So I will wait. And of course I am aware of Nokias intentions of creating a large socialmedia-based fanbase.
I will not die because of this
I don’t have a Facebook account either so I’ll pick 3,10 or 13….and 10 gets it with 13 a close second.
Speaking of Facebook, in the news a father is paying his daughter $200 not to use Facebook anymore.