Plastic basketballs are mainly used for advertising during basketball games showing support for a particular team as fun invitation to parties and get together or as souvenirs. Plastic basketballs are very inexpensive usually costing around $1-$3. Many websites and stores retailing plastic basketballs also customize or imprint them. The call plastic basketball is inclusive of both plastic and vinyl basketballs.
Vinyl basketballs are softer than plastic or acrylic basketballs. They are lobbed into crowds of spectators at basketball matches for advertising purposes or to display support for a team. The promotional balls have a company or product logo imprinted on them while the basketballs showing team support undergo the team logo and a slogan showing backing for the aggroup. Vinyl basketballs can be re-inflated unlike plastic balls and they are softer.
Extra-Mile com retails the best plastic basketballs. It sells both plastic and vinyl basketballs with custom logos or slogans. A 3 diameter plastic basketball costs around $1.5 for 100 balls. As the quantity of balls ordered increase the price comes down. So 500 plastic balls change for around $1 each. They are available in red blue color yellow and orange colors. These basketballs are also in demand as corporate gifts and souvenirs at corporate functions and fundraisers. MiniSportsBalls com also retails vinyl and plastic mini basketballs of 4 diameter. Each plastic roll costs $2 for 50 balls with $20 extra for printing a single color create by mental act on it. Pepco. Poms com also retails 3 colored basketballs of plastic. They are lightweight and undergo an imprint area panel of 2 diameter. Then there are stores like Blair Candy which have put plastic basketballs to innovative usage by filling them up with candy and referee whistles to be distributed during games and parties.
The reason plastic basketballs are preferred over flog or rubber imprinted basketballs is that they are cheaper transport and more durable. There is no fear of punctures or ruptures or any need to re-inflate these balls.
Related article:
http://kerryaniiwre.blogspot.com/2007/11/plastic-basketballs.html
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