Successful Blog

Here is a good place for a call to action.

  • Home
  • Community
  • About
  • Author Guidelines
  • Liz’s Book
  • Stay Tuned

QuickStudy Reference Charts

October 6, 2007 by Liz

QuickStudy Offers Great Reference Charts!

Great Find: QuickStudy by Bar Charts, Inc.

Permalink: http://www.barcharts.com/

Target Audience: Anyone who uses a computer!

Content:

Bar Charts, Inc. produces laminated QuickStudy guides for academic and computer topics. You may have seen them in book stores. But, did you know they also offer free guides in pdf format? My favorite is Computer Shortcuts & Special Characters.

e.jpg

For example, do you ever forget how to add the accent to an é? I use these special characters occasionally, but not enough to memorize them. So I often turn to this guide.

This tool is on my favorites list because it’s:

  • Free
  • Convenient

Check it out yourself. Maybe there’s something that you will find helpful. Look for the “Free Downloads” link conveniently located on the banner. Click this QuickStudy image to go there.

QuickStudy

See you next time!

–Sandy, Purple Wren

Related
Great Find: PictureTrail
Sandy’s Great Graphic Find: CoolText
Sandy’s Great Graphic Find: Pixel Ruler

Filed Under: Design, Successful Blog, Tools Tagged With: bc, Great-Find, PurpleWren, QuickStudy, Sandy-Renshaw

The 5 Hats of Graphic Designers

August 15, 2007 by Guest Author

Guest Writer: David Airey

Before computers entered the mix, the production of print material was firmly in the hands of graphic designers and printers. It took a very clued-in client to have any idea about the print-production process. Therefore, people were mentally prepared to pay substantial amounts for their logo designs, brochures and annual reports.

That was then. Now, however, things are very different.

Ask most people how they would design a logo or prepare a newsletter and they’d automatically point to the computer, placing their faith in software packages to do the job.

So if a novice can work their way around a photo manipulation or page layout program, why do designers still charge large figures for their services?

five-hats-of-graphic-designers

Today’s designer must wear many hats, and I’ll talk about some of them here.

The problem solving hat

Designers are presented with a problem, and it’s their task to find a solution. The problem could be to set a business apart from its competition by using an effective logo design, or to increase product sales with a cleverly designed advertising campaign. Whatever the initial brief, there’s a clearly defined problem and the designer puts on their thinking hat.

The teaching hat

By educating clients, customer-satisfaction is improved and the designer is more likely to be called upon in the future. What might a designer teach? File preparation is an important part of the print production process, and a lot of my time is spent educating clients about file types. You’d be surprised just how many of my clients don’t understand that a thumbnail image off a website can’t be used for a full-size A3 poster. This design guide for print provides a little more info.

The graphic designer hat

This is actually just one function of a modern-day designer. Ask any self-employed designer just how much time they spend designing and you’ll probably be surprised at the answer. I can’t say for sure how long I spend actually designing, but I think it’s between 25% to 40%.

The salesperson hat

Whether it be attracting new clients or selling an idea, graphic designers need to have enough confidence in their own ability to persuade a client that they’re making the right decision. Every design pitch must be treated like a sale. When meeting people for the first time, I make sure to focus at least my first three questions on topics not related to business. It’s much easier to develop a relationship with a person than it is a business, so don’t be pushy.

The manager hat

Accounting is a vital aspect of my business operations, and I’ve not yet reached the stage where I need to outsource, or take on an extra employee. I process my own tax returns once every year, and calculate my VAT returns every three months. This needs the manager hat, taking a step back from the creative side of work and focusing on the numbers. Time management and project management are also encompassed by this hat.

To summarize

Whilst it’s clear that the role of graphic designers has changed, it still remains an extremely creative industry. Of course, designers aren’t the only ones who must wear different hats in their profession.

What’s your line of work and how many different hats do you wear?

—David Airey

Thanks, David, for this grand explanation of what the folks in your profession do!
Come back again to tell us more, anytime.

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Filed Under: Design, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, Careers, David-Airey, graphic-designers

30 Photo and Art Links Shared by Bloggers

August 1, 2007 by Liz

I Just Had to Share

Hi Everyone! We talked about photo and art sources last night at Open Comments Night. Sure, we talked about other things — Twitter and business coaching. In the end, we must have stayed on topic, because we developed an impressive list of links to pass on today. YEA!!

Here are some cool links we shared.

  1. Stock Exchange
  2. Salon de Maria Art Resources
  3. Dan Heller Photography
  4. Art New Blog
  5. Morguefile
  6. USDA Photo Library
  7. Shunya Lost Cities
  8. Nelson-Atkins
  9. Free Photos.org
  10. Vernon’s Favorite Flickr Photo
  11. Becky’s Flckr
  12. Maria’s Flickr
  13. Pbase
  14. Plan59
  15. Anahat Katkin
  16. Salon de Maria Birthday
  17. Ashley Cecil
  18. iStockPhoto
  19. Phase
  20. Susan Reynolds Art Gallery
  21. Renee Biertempfel
  22. Captain Crayon
  23. Strobist
  24. The Inn
  25. 5 steps to being more photogenic
  26. Rijksmuseum
  27. New York Public Library Digital Gallery
  28. Carpe Factum photos
  29. APOD Astronomy Picture of the Day
  30. Ask Patty’s Jody DeVere’s Racing for a cause at Irwindale Speedway

Thanks everyone for coming!
I hope you all had a great time!

–ME “Liz” Strauss

What is Tuesday Open Comment Night?

Filed Under: Design, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blog_promotion, discussion, letting_off_steam, living-social-media, Open_Comment_Night

ImageChef

June 3, 2007 by Liz

Cook Up Something Special With ImageChef!

Great Find: ImageChef

Permalink: http://www.imagechef.com/

Target Audience: Anyone interested in creating graphics quickly!

Content:

ImageChef was founded in 2003, so while it’s not a brand new graphics generator, they are always releasing new features and support. You can create custom images without special knowledge or software. Once registered you can email your creations to friends and host your images on the ImageChef site.

And there are so many choices! Below are some examples of graphics I created. This tool is on my favorites list because it is:

  • Easy-to-use
  • Free
  • Unique
Images Created in ImageChef

Check it out yourself.

See you next time!

–Sandy, Purple Wren

Related
Sandy’s Great Graphic Find: CoolText
Sandy’s Great Graphic Find: Pixel Ruler
Great Find: PictureTrail

Filed Under: Design, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, Great-Find, imagechef, PurpleWren, Sandy-Renshaw

5 Type Tweaking Tricks for a Sunday Afternoon

May 27, 2007 by Liz

Tweaking IS Fun, Type Is Meant to Be Read

Blog Tweaks Logo

It’s Sunday. The five minutes of Chicago spring is over. A young blogger’s fancy turns to thoughts of baseball and tweaking a blog. The easiest thing to touch and change in a template is the font size and style. Change a number and whoosh! we’ve got a new look. It’s so easy, that sometimes we do it without attention to how all of those changes work when we put them together.

Our readers live with the result. Sometimes it’s fabulous, sometimes not so much.

5 Type Tweaking Tricks for a Sunday Afternoon

Tweaking type is art of the highest form . . . um . . . or to say it another way, the look of our blog can need some serious tweaking. If we put it together without giving attention to the big picture, or if it’s time to freshen things up to get back in fashion, a few tricks, some perspective will do wonders to move us to a clean, readable, and magnetic result.

Choosing fonts and tweaking them is a form of expression. Taking the time to do it right, previewing as we go is critical, but so is knowing the basics of how people interact with type. Here are some tricks to give special attention to the type fonts on a blogs.

  1. Look out for too many typefaces and type fonts Try to keep to two type families please — three at the most. With a range of sizes, that should be enough to meet all of your type needs. More than that and eyes don’t know where to go or how to focus. Designers know that it’s less distracting to keep the number low — simple is elegant.
  2. In like manner, stick to 3 colors for your type and design. It’s hard enough to find 3 colors that go together well. Colors are more distracting than type fonts. Use a color generator tool to get a palette that defines colors that are made from the same base. If you have a photo in your header some color palette generators will actually pull colors right from it. This will help you avoid colors — red is one, bright blue is another — that can vibrate on dark backgrounds which can motion sickness to occur — seriously.
  3. When working with type, be as makthematical as you can. Make your h1, h2, h3, and h4 (if you use them) heads scale down in equal mathematical increments. The naked eye might be able to tell the difference between 1% em or 1 pixel, but a tension will occur that makes your blog feel slightly out of whack when people look at it.
  4. Define your type area to a readable width. A type area so wide I need to drive to read across and then need to drive back to continue on will wear out my eyes in no time. The width should get narrow as the type gets smaller, so that readers can find their way back to the next line.
  5. Keep your type in blocks. When you lean back and look at your overall blog, your type should hold together in bigger type blocks. For example, the post title, post and all of the after matter should hang as one item, despite the fact that they are many different parts. Adjust the space between the parts until the entire post looks to be a single unit. That will help readers actually see your blog in the way you have written it.

If you spend time today tweaking the type on your blog, these are five points to be vigilant about. Blogs with these problems slow us down as readers. When the reading is slow, we perceive it as work. Soon enough we move on to something that seems more fun.

Great type is like the shine on your shoes. It adds appeal and takes your brand up a notch. It’s a quiet way to let readers know that you care a whole lot about their experience.

–ME :Liz” Strauss
Check out the Work with Liz!! page in the sidebar.

Filed Under: Blog Basics, Design, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, Blog Basics, blog-tweaks, Design, fonts, type

Tabblo

May 6, 2007 by Liz

Create Books, Posters, Albums

Great Find: Tabblo

Permalink: http://www.tabblo.com/studio/

Target Audience: Anyone interested in sharing photos!

Content:

Tabblo logo

This site is another great way to share your photos and add words to make “tabblos” (web pages). There’s also a lively community. Here’s a Tabblo called Creation at its Best! (Click photo to see the page.) It’s easy to upload photos or import them from Flickr and Picasa. Click this screen shot or the next one to check it out.

Creation at its Best Tabblo

I’m not sure what I like better – the original Tabblo or the photo cube. You can select any five photos for your cube. There’s easy-to-follow directions. Then just print it out, make some cuts, and fold it up.

And, they have a printing service, so you can order a copy of your latest creation! Check it out yourself and let me know which is your favorite.

See you next time!

–Sandy, Purple Wren

Related
Sandy’s Great Graphic Find: CoolText
Sandy’s Great Graphic Find: Pixel Ruler
Great Find: PictureTrail

Filed Under: Design, Successful Blog, Tools Tagged With: bc, color-in-motion, Purple-Wren, Sandy-Renshaw, visuals

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • …
  • 16
  • Next Page »

Recently Updated Posts

How to Become a Better Storyteller

SEO and Content Marketing

How to Use Both Content Marketing and SEO to Amplify Your Blog

9 Practical Work-at-Home Ideas For Moms

How to Monetize Your Hobby

How To Get Paid For Sharing Your Travel Stories

7 reasons why visitors leave websites for ever



From Liz Strauss & GeniusShared Press

  • What IS an SOB?!
  • SOB A-Z Directory
  • Letting Liz Be

© 2025 ME Strauss & GeniusShared