Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Labels. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Labels Quotes And Sayings by 97 Authors including Peter Temple,Mason Cooley,John Irving,Michael Owen Bruce,Gabrielle Aplin for you to enjoy and share.
As far as I am concerned, I write novels, and other people can do the labelling.
If everything had a label, we would live in a fully delineated but false world.
Sometimes, when we are labeled, when we are branded, our brand becomes our calling;
I've got them in the can and I am looking for a label.
Labels fund things and have resources for you to use. But just because you sign doesn't mean you sign yourself away so they can then tell you what to do. You need to have a plan yourself before they do.
If you gotta label me, label me proud.
My label is just "good farming", which isn't something you can put on a t-shirt.
I hate labels; the problem is that if you say you're one thing, it's hard for people to imagine you as something else. Music is way more complicated than that.
People like to think of you as a certain person, or a certain type of person, and they do love to give you a label. We like luggage labels, and we like people labels.
I can't tell you how freeing it is to have my own label. For the first time in my career, I have total control.
I think people think that labels can get you features more than you can get your own. I just doesn't work like that.
We tend to treat labels as real, rather than as representations of reality
I don't think labels are as important as results.
Drink wine, not labels.
When you get past making labels for things, it is possible to combine and transform elements into new things. Look at things until their import, identity, name, use, and description have dissolved.
You can't just buy things for the label - it's ridiculous.
I don't like to be labeled, to be anything. I've made the mistake before myself of labeling my music, but it's counter-productive.
A reader should know what he might reasonably expect under a particular label.
Labels want my name beside a X like Malcolm
A good legible label is usually worth, for information, a ton of significant attitude and expression in a historical picture.
We label things through value systems that we have developed. But nothing is or is not unless we feel it is that way. We give ground to reality by creating it.
Everyone omes with a label, it's up to you to peel it off. pg.155 Vanishing Acts
My label is largely about fabrics; print is definitely not my point of difference!
I think staying away from labels is what makes my films refreshing.
Labels cloud our vision and distract us from seeing how much we have in common with one another.
I am in discussions with a label. We are talking about doing something.
I'd rather be on a label that understands us and allows us to be a bit odd.
Music is music; you don't have to put a label on it.
What labels me, negates me.
People label you the way they know you best.
I don't like labels. I don't understand the need for them. When you define yourself a certain way, people have expectations.
That's the thing about labels - they're bloody sticky! Although the harsh words from classmates stopped years ago, the damage has been done.
A label doesn't make something so. A label is just a word. It's what a person does that makes them who they are
Because that was what we all did - we searched for labels for people until we found one we thought might fit, and then we sighed in relief that we had placed them.
To name a thing is easy: the difficulty is to discern it before its appearance.
When we tag ourselves with a particular label, we mustn't be surprised when we attract others looking for our particular item.
You are too free and untamable to be labeled.
I want people to get out of that nasty habit of needing a label. Every genre for each song is different.
I've always tried to stay clear of being labeled, putting a label on what type of music that I make.
Running a label in 2013, you don't do it for any financial purpose, you do it for all the amazing creative aspects of what you can achieve.
I hate labels, and I wear no labels. When a man has to put something around his neck and say I am, he isn't.
A sight of the label is worth 50 years experience.
I've never been a fan of labels. I think its very easy to kind of look at somebody and just kind of throw a label on them 'They're crazy.'
Everything may be labelled- but everybody is not.
It's one thing to be a fan and it's another thing to be a label.
Break your bad labels instead of living in them.
If I pick up a book with vampires on the cover, I want there to be vampires. If I pick up a book with spaceships on the cover, I want spaceships. If I see one with dragons, I want there to be dragons inside the book. Proper labeling. Ethical labeling.
What is the point of labeling each individual piece of fruit? Buy the fruit, EAT the ad! We've carved a chunk out of the ozone, burned up all the rainforests, soon we won't be able to BREATHE, and all because we had to label each individual piece of fruit.
I'm a label that wants to sell. I believe in clothes.
People are too complicated to have simple labels.
Labels are boring and often have nothing to with the person; it is just the way others perceive you, or choose to perceive you.
If you label it this, then it can't be that.
Once my jars were labeled, I felt contentedly thrilled with myself, as if I had pulled off a wonderful trick. People feel this way when they bake bread or have babies, and although they are perfectly entitled to feel that way, in fact, nature does most of the work.
I don't think anybody's quite accurately branded me. I'm not sure I could do it myself.
I don't like the idea that the first preparation when you start to design your building has to put your label. I think this is not fair. It's not fair to the building or to the people, to the client, because every building tells a different story.
Branding is a profound manifestation of the human condition
I don't care who's on the label, because I have a job to do.
...judgment says more about the labeler than the labeled.
I've been labeled all my life.
People often need to describe things quickly and so they use a shorthand. The problem is that after they use a label, they begin to think only in terms of the label instead of the totality of the experience a novel provides.
But we have all been branded even if you can't see it, inside if not without
Whatever labels are being pinned on me have nothing to do with me.
What I really resent most about people sticking labels on you is that it cuts off all the other elements of what you are because it can only deal with black and white; the cartoon.
To label myself is similar to thinking that I can come up with a single phrase to explain the universe.
I don't like labels. I won't be defined by words like normal, unbalanced, or damaged. There's so much more to me than words. I have layers, just like the next person, and if you picked me apart layer-by-layer, you'd find a blackened crust where my heart should be.
Sometimes labeling is only useful, like with OCD. Once you're labeled you can be treated. On other occasions labeling leads to tyranny, like with childhood bipolar disorder in the U.S.
I want to
peel away all the labels
I had once given to others
and place them
upon the fabric
of my own identity.
They have reflected back to me,
everything that I refuse
to See in myself.
If you label me, you negate me?
I hate labels because it should be just music. I don't see anything wrong with disco. Call it anything. It's music.
You rarely get money out of labels, except for when they open up a budget for a project. Other than that, it's a do-or-die type thing.
So So Def has been one of the most successful and consistent labels in the game in the last 10 years.
Okay, let's talk about cartoon labels for half a second - some people think anything with a dog or a car or a colorful alien is garbage, which is not true. Look at Big Moose Red. It's, like, a $6 wine with a cheesy label, and it's actually a solid wine.
Artists are traditionally resistant to labels.
Very active in the label, maybe to a fault sometimes.
We send our kids off to school to major in labeling and think the ones who do it best deserve the highest grades.
It's fun seeing my label on someone's behind - I like that.
Basically we just created our own label, but again we just did it to document our own music and create our own thing, so the major labels were just always out of our picture, we're not interested.
Technology being the way it is, and record sales being the way it is, there are not too many things that you need to depend on a label for that you can't go out and do yourself.
I've never really gotten into the whole labels thing. There were times I would cover a pop song, and people would say 'You sound really country.' I gave up on that whole thing a long time ago.
The problem is that resuscitating old labels doesn't work anymore. I think it is very important to give hope to a new generation of designers, so that one day they really can put their own names out there.
A label's typical plan would be to put something out that's safer and get fans, and then push buttons, but my idea is to push buttons first, scare off the people who are gonna be scared off, and then the right people will like you for who you really are, and stay with you.
If you don't build a personal brand, someone else will brand you with the wrong label.
I try not to name too many labels - not because it's not cool, but because it starts getting political.
Fashion is not necessarily about labels. It's not about brands. It's about something else that comes from within you.
The study of personal branding brings one to realize everything is personal and everyone is branded.
A label locks me into a definition that people use to control me. A vision graces me with an idea that serves to release me.
Putting out the things that I like best hasn't been the easiest way to run a label, and it still isn't because it requires finding an audience for each record.
I don't like labels necessarily because a label doesn't mean very much. But when it comes to being conservative, I happen to be conservative.
The world loves stupid labels. I wish we got to choose our own.
If you put a label on yourself, people will pigeonhole you.
Labels don't mean anything. Who cares about labels when someone is slapping you in the face? Who cares about labels when someone is saving you from drowning? Who someone is and what they do is all that matters.
I'm constantly being courted by labels and their backing. Obviously the market is there when you talk about the economics and the numbers, but it's hard to give up the freedom of being able to do whatever you want.
Major labels limit you, but I also learned my tricks from getting around that.
Nobody really labeled themselves, unless they wanted to escape someone else doing it for them.
As I say, you get labelled. To stop all that, I've got to win things - that's the only way you make your mark.
You can be labelled but if it doesn't speak to people then it won't work. The social media and online has been really important. Fans are really smart too: they don't want to hear something manufactured or something that has too much marketing behind it.
I hated labels anyway. People didn't fit in slots
prostitute, housewife, saint
like sorting the mail. We were so mutable, fluid with fear and desire, ideals and angles, changeable as water.
Jacob Thorke. My label, but not the description of a person. The prints are the most permanent thing about me.
I made this record without a record label.
Who are you? Answer; you are who you are in this given moment. Label-less. Limitless. Remember that from this day forward.