Forms are often where systems go to hide decisions, gate access, and extract labor. At Stimpunks, we do forms differently: we design them as careful, low-friction tools that serve people instead of screening them out.
This page explains how we use forms intentionally — to gather what we need, minimize burden, and respect the realities of neurodivergent and disabled lives. Our forms avoid unnecessary fields, use plain-language labels, and offer clear purpose statements so people know exactly why they’re giving information and how it will be used. When possible, we provide multiple ways to share answers (text, upload, recorded message, conversation) because one format shouldn’t be the barrier to participation.
We also default to open about how our forms work, what data we collect, and why — not to perform transparency, but to build trust and accountability. These forms are not traps, screens, or proxies for compliance. They are tools to help us coordinate work, support people, and do administration in a way that aligns with our values and the law.
Forms should be functional — not exhausting.
Useful — not extractive.
Visit our House Style Guide for more on form accessibility.
The Forms
- Model Release Form
- Travel Consent Form
- Media Release Form
- Community Service Form
- In-Kind Donation Form
- Meeting Your Needs
- Independent Contractor Agreement Form
- Blog Post Submission Form
- Sign Why Sheet
- Submit Creator Bio
- Rules of Engagement
- Testimonial Form
- Parental Consent Form
- Request Venue Insurance
- Stimpunks Permitted User Internet Access Policy
