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Home » Banners and Buttons
Supervert Banners and Buttons
Do you like some Supervert product? There is probably a banner for it! The banners and buttons here are free for you to use on your web site, blog, or other page. You can choose to link to images hosted on supervert.com, thus saving your own bandwidth, or you can copy the images to your own site to link to supervert.com or its spawn. Currently there are banners for:
- Supervert.com
- Extraterrestrial Sex Fetish
- Sex Lingo
- Marquis de Sade eLibrary
- PervScan.com
- RealityStudio.org
- FleursDuMal.org
Adding any of these banners to your site is simple. First, select the banner size you want.
Once you've found the banner you want, simply click the "Get banner code" link, copy the code, and paste it into your web page. Voilà! You will automatically get a graphic, hosted by supervert.com, that links to the appropriate page or web site. Alternatively, you can also copy the images to your site.
Win a free book! Feeling artistic? Want to show your design chops to the Supervert community? Design a banner for supervert.com or for any Supervert product. Email your banner to banners@supervert.com and if Supervert feels that it meets its artistic standards, it will add your banner to the gallery and send you a free copy of Extraterrestrial Sex Fetish. (To qualify for the free book, you can design anything larger than a microbutton. In other words, a microbutton alone does not qualify you for a prize. NOTE: You must be at least eighteen years of age to receive Extraterrestrial Sex Fetish. Supervert products are for adults only.)
Email this page to a friend
Tell someone about Supervert Banners & Banner Graphics at supervert.com. (Email addresses are not recorded or used in any way.)
Other Supervert Sites
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PervScan.com is an index to the strange obsessions, sexual outrages, and deviant doings that can be found in the news.
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RealityStudio.org is a site featuring William S. Burroughs news, texts, links, and community.
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FleursDuMal.org is the definitive online presentation of Charles Baudelaire's Fleurs du mal (Flowers of Evil).
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