October 31, 2007

A little humor – designer edition

Filed under: Humor — HDW @ 8:27 am

Make My Logo Bigger Cream! But wait there’s more!

Warning, do not use all of these products on the same ad!

h/t to On Design

October 30, 2007

Creating a Twirl

Filed under: Graphic Design — HDW @ 12:46 pm

I’ve been playing with vector scrolling and flourishes for a week or so, and I just noticed a nice tutorial on making them. Very simple. Go take a look at The Twirl Tool / Create Quality Twirls In 3 Steps.

Define “Illegal” again

Filed under: Current Events,In the News — HDW @ 6:29 am

Blogger News Network is linking to What Part of ‘Illegal’ Don’t You Understand?

“Illegal” is accurate insofar as it describes a person’s immigration status. About 60 percent of the people it applies to entered the country unlawfully. The rest are those who entered legally but did not leave when they were supposed to. The statutory penalties associated with their misdeeds are not insignificant, but neither are they criminal. You get caught, you get sent home.

Since the word modifies not the crime but the whole person, it goes too far. It spreads, like a stain that cannot wash out. It leaves its target diminished as a human, a lifetime member of a presumptive criminal class. People are often surprised to learn that illegal immigrants have rights. Really? Constitutional rights? But aren’t they illegal? Of course they have rights: they have the presumption of innocence and the civil liberties that the Constitution wisely bestows on all people, not just citizens.

Good blog, good post. Go read it.

October 29, 2007

Monday Open House

Filed under: About this blog,Blogging,Open House — HDW @ 6:15 am

Has blogrolling been slow lately? It sure seems to be slow loading here. I’m considering restructuring my site so it loads last. Currently it leaves my content off when it fails to load.

This is the Monday edition of Open House, and comments and trackbacks are now open. If your site doesn’t support trackbacks, use the Wizbang Standalone Trackback Pinger.

The Cowboy Code Marshals

Filed under: Blogging,General Ranting — HDW @ 6:12 am

I’ve recently joined The Cowboy Code Marshals, a group of bloggers who follow the Cowboy Code.

The Cowboy Code Marshals - Deputy Badge

  1. A cowboy always tells the truth and keeps his word.
  2. A cowboy is a Patriot and stands for Truth, Justice and the American way.
  3. A cowboy never betrays a trust or takes advantage.
  4. A cowboy is brave, but never careless.
  5. A cowboy defends the weak and helps them.
  6. A cowboy is kind to children, old folks, and to animals.
  7. A cowboy is free from racial and religious prejudice.
  8. A cowboy is clean about his person and in thought, word, and deed.
  9. A cowboy is loyal, hard working and maintains a high ethic.
  10. A cowboy is thankful for what God has given him.

October 26, 2007

A little humor

Filed under: Humor — HDW @ 7:00 am

Warning, number three contains extreme bathroom humor, and may not be suitable for those with a weak stomach.

  1. If They Only Had A Brain!
  2. Ouch!
  3. Macaroni and Beef

October 25, 2007

Vector overlay

Filed under: Graphic Design,PhotoShop — HDW @ 7:13 am

I’m still playing with vectors and photos. Still no idea what I’m going to do with it. The technique I’m using is extremely simple. I’m overlaying the vector shapes and text over the photos in PhotoShop, then adjusting the opacity and layer blending modes. Here’s the latest sketch.

Lioness looking through a window with vector overlay

It was feeding time at the zoo in case you’re wondering what this beautiful young lady was looking at so intently. I don’t know about you, but I’d hesitate to open a door if she was looking though a window from the other side.

Thursday Open House

Filed under: Open House — HDW @ 6:02 am

Anybody getting good fall color photographs? Let me know.

This is the Thursday edition of Open House, and comments and trackbacks are now open. If your site doesn’t support trackbacks, use the Wizbang Standalone Trackback Pinger.

October 24, 2007

More on Blending Modes

Filed under: PhotoShop — HDW @ 7:10 am

I recently wrote about PhotoShop blending modes, and I have found a good follow up on that. Go visit Jay Arraich’s Photoshop Tips – Blend Modes for more about the individual modes.

Vectors, Fonts, and Photos

Filed under: Graphic Design,PhotoShop — HDW @ 6:43 am

I’m fascinated by the use of vector shapes and script fonts with photos. Inspiration in its vaguest form. I haven’t worked out exactly what I’m going to use it for, but I’ve been playing with ideas. Nothing more than rough PhotoShop sketches so far, but there’s a lot of potential there. Here’s my latest sketch.

Tiger with vector overlay

Using the word strength may be a bit of a cliché, but this is just a sketch. Besides, Lorem Ipsum looked funny.

October 23, 2007

A little humor

Filed under: Humor — HDW @ 12:29 pm

It’s Rowan Atkinson, do I need to say more? Rowan Atkinson and the Invisible Drum Kit

Fall Colors

Filed under: Photos,Wandering — HDW @ 7:45 am

Despite predictions to the contrary, Fall colors aren’t too bad. Random locations in Giles County Virginia.

Fall in Giles County Virginia

Fall in Giles County Virginia

Fall in Giles County Virginia

October 22, 2007

Monday Open House

Filed under: Humor,Open House — HDW @ 8:34 am

This is why I don’t like cats.


This is the Monday edition of Open House, and comments and trackbacks are now open. If your site doesn’t support trackbacks, use the Wizbang Standalone Trackback Pinger.

Mountain Lake – Virginia

Filed under: Photos,Wandering — HDW @ 6:49 am

Any movie buffs visiting today? Recognize this location?

Mountain Lake Virginia

Mountain Lake Virginia

Mountain Lake Virginia

Need a hint? Picture the second picture with water instead of grass in the foreground.

Still nothing? How about Patrick Swayze and Jennifer Grey? Dirty Dancing (1987) was filmed here. Obviously the water level has gone down. Apparently this lake’s water level plummets every few decades, then comes back. Nobody is quite sure why.

Update: Here’s their website, in case anyone is curious. Mountain Lake Hotel.

October 19, 2007

PhotoShop 101 #2 – Blend Modes and Adjustment Layers

Filed under: PhotoShop — HDW @ 10:18 pm

Jason suggested in the comments of my last PhotoShop post that I should discuss blend modes and adjustment layers next. I’d hate for anyone to think that I don’t listen.

I’ll use another of my Patoka Lake photos as an example. Here’s the original.

Patoka Lake Indiana

To start with, I’ll briefly discuss blending modes. I’m not an expert on the subject, but I feel comfortable giving an overview. The purpose of blending modes is to alter the way that partially transparent layers interact with layers below them. The normal mode is just that, normal transparency. The other modes aren’t that simple. Not only are they transparent, but they affect the way this transparency is displayed. Lighten for instance compares overlapping colors and chooses the lightest color. It does this for each different color independently, thus in one instance it might use the front color, in another the back. Darken as you might guess does he opposite. Multiply uses the background color and multiplies it times the foreground color. This can do wonders to increase the depth of a flat image if done properly.

Each mode does something a little different. I’d recommend experimentation to see how they work. For my example I took the original picture, duplicated the layer, made a few subtle edits, and set the layer mode to multiply with a 38% opacity. I used a layer mask to keep the altered layer from darkening the shoreline, but let the multiplication effect change the rest. Notice how the color range is richer than the original?

Patoka Lake Indiana - Photoshop example

While the change isn’t significant, you can see the potential there.

Now for adjustment layers. Again I’ll use the original image at the top as an example. Lets start with the premise that I wasn’t satisfied with the color range of the photo. I could adjust the color and saturation by working directly with the original image, but why take that risk? Instead, I use one of a number of adjustment layers. This allows me to change the hue and saturation, brightness and contrast, or a number of other attributes without risk to the original image. (Despite this safety margin, always save a copy of the original) The benefit of using adjustment layers is that it is selective. Adjustment layers use a layer mask to control where the adjustments are made. So I can make part of the photo more green and saturated, while using a second adjustment layer to make other parts lighter and less saturated.

Patoka Lake Indiana

That’s not the only benefit though. There is a bonus. Unlike adjustments directly to the primary layer, adjustment layers can be modified again later. Don’t like the hue, change it later. Don’t like the adjustment layer at all, delete it.

Most people think of PhotoShop as a huge and powerful tool, which in some ways it is. The real mastery of it though, isn’t in using it as a graphical sledgehammer. It’s in using it as a feather touch brush. Blending modes and adjustment layers are part of that feather touch. They allow the subtlest of changes, the finest of transitions. Don’t try to do too much at once. You don’t have to do everything with one layer. Add a second, or a third. Add seventeen. Use the tool as it’s meant to be used. Use the feather, not the hammer.

Fall has Fallen

Filed under: Art,In other blogs...,Photography,Photos — HDW @ 2:17 pm

Falling leaf - Jan Bussey

Have you been to Cascade Exposures lately? Here’s three reasons you should have.

Evil Genius – Home Edition

Filed under: Computers,Humor — HDW @ 9:39 am

I’ve been using two monitors at work for five or six years now, so I can relate to this one. Last month I added a second monitor at home though, so now I can be an evil genius at home too! If I could just get that third monitor I’ve had my eye on for work…

October 18, 2007

Design Review – 94.9 FM Star Country

Filed under: Blogging,Design Review,Web Design — HDW @ 11:30 pm

Why is it that radio stations tend to have atrocious websites? While I understand that they’re not in a visual field, you’d think they’d know enough to delegate to someone appropriate. Though I love their radio station, I’ll mostly be handling the review of 94.9 FM Star Country’s website as a lesson in what not to do.

Star Country Radio

Style
The style of bright, bold, and animated. That’s not a compliment.

The color palette is mostly yellow and blue as you can see from the screen shot above. While I can see a lot of potential with this palette, this isn’t quite working. Too much going on with the color. This will be an ongoing theme in this review. A simplification of the color palette would go along way here. Simplification would help unify the content, making it one page, and one layout, rather than the current series of disjointed and unrelated boxes.

Using blue and red text on a yellow background, as is done below the fold, isn’t helping this overly colorful and overly cluttered layout. Using a little quieter color combination would significantly improve readability.

By animated I didn’t mean lively. I mean there are a lot of things moving on this page. Very annoying. That white box that seems to have the only bit of real content on the home page… that’s animated too. It switches ever 30 seconds or so between three different blocks of content. Limiting the animation used here would also be an improvement.

One of the animated elements used on most if not all of the pages on the site has aspects that I like. The blue banner-like element just below the header. While I don’t think it’s currently working well as one of several moving elements, I like it’s purpose. It lets a viewer know what’s currently playing on the air. It’s a nice touch. I’d either simplify it into a less dynamic, and more text-like element, or change the page layout so that this element works better.

The layout is the biggest problem for me. Essentially this home page is laid out as four column page with a fixed width above the fold. Below the fold it switches to two column. Fixed width might be appropriate here, that’s arguable, but I’ll let it slide. The four column however really isn’t working here. It’s limiting the content to about 320 x 360 pixels above the fold (that’s the animated white box I mentioned above). That’s a lot of wasted screen real estate. Unlike the home page, most of the pages appear to be in a slightly better three column layout. Definitely an improvement.

Star Country Radio

Structure
I’ll start the structure section by admitting that I am a bit of a snob when it comes to site construction. Let me count the ways.

  1. I don’t like unnecessarily invalid code
  2. I don’t like ASP, ASP.net, or Microsoft products in general (see #1)
  3. I don’t like table layout
  4. I don’t like Font tags
  5. I don’t like unnecessary use of inline CSS
  6. I don’t like overuse of scripts

Taking that into account, there are a number of things I don’t like about this site’s structure. Fortunately, table layout isn’t one of them. The all CSS layout might be overly complex for my taste, but there are no tables to be seen. The other five items listed above do come into play though.

There is what I consider a unacceptable level of invalid code. While most of it is minor, that doesn’t really let the site off the hook. Sure they’re minor errors, but they’d also be easy to fix. Why not do that?

Microsoft and ASP.net rear their ugly heads. This is likely the source of a lot of the invalid code. It’s quite possible that there are very nice sites put together by Microsoft products, but every one I know of is filled with excessive amounts of invalid and extraneous code. From the looks of it, some of this content was also cut and pasted in from MS Word, which doesn’t improve my opinion of the site. In my experience, Word creates it’s own little validation hell. Some versions seem to add more extraneous code than content when you paste directly into an HTML editor.

Font tags are interspersed throughout the site for no reason that I can see. A few simple lines of CSS would allow use of the class elements to do the same thing. Much less labor intensive to change.

There are a lot of instances of inline CSS that I don’t see the purpose of. Using one of the linked style sheets would have been a better choice in most instances. Much easier to maintain, and much easier to change in the future. Eliminating the use of inline CSS and font tags would significant factor in creating a unified appearance site wide. It would also make it significantly easier to update this unified appearance over time.

There are nine scripts running when I tested the page. This seems a bit excessive to me. While I think this is a mistake, they have somewhat improved my opinion of this by using scripts local to their site. Remote scripts are, in my experience, much more likely to cause site problems and loading issues.

Content
The content is what you’d expect from a radio station. Events, calendars, bios of the on-air personalities. A lot of potential for a community radio station. A community the size of Roanoke can really benefit from a resource like this. That being said, I don’t think the site is living up to its potential.

There is also a blog for one of the personalities, which came as a surprise to me when I heard about it. It’s actually a nice addition to the site, though from a structure point of view it needs some work.

Star Country Radio

Blogging
As you can tell from my site, I’m in favor of it as a rule. It does however, need to be done right. A business should blog in a professional manner, or not at all. Robynn’s Corner is one of those aspects of this site that I think has a lot of potential. The potential for interaction between radio personalities and their listeners.

I think the content of this section of the site is perfectly reasonable, though there should possible be more. The layout needs cleaning in line with the rest of the site, though the header is a little clearer here. Like the main site, advertisers and site navigation need to be separated for clarity purposes. Having advertisers interspersed within site navigation and content is confusing at best.

Here’s what I think would really get this blog going.

  1. Convert the blog to a more industry standard blogging platform. This would give you
    • RSS feeds so viewers can subscribe
    • Moderated commenting, registration of commentors is possible
    • RSS feeds for commenting, so fans can follow online conversations if they desire
    • The ability to easily post content in a timely fashion
  2. Expand the use of blogging to other personalities who are interested. A group blog for the station rather than individual sub-domains for each personality might work better.
  3. Give site authors access to post while on air, though I’d suggest the assistance of an editor
  4. A dedicated support person for the blog. Someone with enough web and blogging experience to streamline the process for on-air personalities.

If they’re going to blog, they need to jump in completely. The current blog is more of an almost blog. No comments, not RSS feeds. Not much in the way of timely posting. They need to update the blogging platform with something like WordPress or Movable Type, or don’t blog at all. Bringing in a consultant to train the staff bloggers wouldn’t be a bad idea. A dedicated support person would be better if blogging was to be made a priority.

What I would change
It would be an interesting project. Unification would be my first big goal. One unified site structure, with clean lines and a simplified color palette.

I’d start this unification plan by making the whole site three column.The four column home page is too complex and confusing. I’d top the page with a clearly defined header, no ads. The current use of most of the header for ads space is confusing to the eye. I bump that advertising down to just below the header and above the primary content.

While I like the idea of the live update of what’s currently on-air, that needs to have a little less prominence, I’d suggest the top of the right sidebar. I’d also suggest making it a little less flashy and dynamic. It draws the eye too much currently.

I’d make the sidebars full length. Currently they end where their content ends. I personally find this distracting. Running them the full length of the content section would make for a much cleaner look for the site.

Pick one primary site color, personally I’d go with blue. Nothing wrong with the current yellow and blue, but one needs to take the lead, with one being the accent.

I like the idea of the white text section headers on the electric blue graphic element that is currently being used, but I’d change the execution of that idea. Rather than making the text part of the graphic element, I’d use CSS to make the electric blue element a background image behind white HTML text. Much more versatile to use, easier to maintain. Right the text, apply the style and you have your section marker. You don’t need an image editor to change the text.

I’d build on that blue on blue color scheme. Define the whole page with the navy blue currently being used n the site, and accent it with a combination of yellow and the brighter blue.

Make the primary paragraph text color black, on a white background. Define the headings in blue to coordinate with the basic site structure. Use of yellow wouldn’t be out of line, but not as text or behind text.

Clean the navigation. Currently the left nav bar is breaking in both IE and Firefox, though in different ways. That needs to be cleaned up, and standardized site wide. I’d put all of the site navigation and functionality, searching and so forth, on the left, while shifting all advertisers to the right. The viewer needs to know, intuitively, where to find things. By dividing between advertiser and site resources, we can clean up what is currently confusing.

remove all font tags, and most of the inline CSS. Maintaining a site like this is time consuming, and there’s not reason to shoot yourself in the foot by making it more difficult to maintain.

Summary
My first impression is that this site is cluttered, disorganized, and needs a lot of help. My second impression though, is that while it does miss the mark, maybe not by as much as it might first appear.

  • The home page layout needs to be reworked.
  • The content is good, though there could definitely be more of it.
  • The site is functional for the most part, but there is definitely a lot of room for improvement.
  • The color palette is too complex, and needs simplification.
  • The site structure needs to be updated.
  • The blog needs to be expanded and upgraded, or removed. No half measures

Overall the site has a lot of potential, especially in my opinion, the blog. it is not however, living up to that potential.

While the radio station is wonderful, and I’m a big fan, the site needs to be brought up to the standard that the station has set for its radio shows. If it is, it will become a big resource for the station, and in my opinion, for the community.

Trackposted to Perri Nelson’s Website, , third world county, A Blog For All, , Pirate’s Cove, Right Voices, and Gone Hollywood, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

Thursday Open House

Filed under: About this blog,Design Review,Open House — HDW @ 8:42 am

As you no doubt noticed, I didn’t have time to post yesterday. Several projects popped up that needed quick turn around. Busy again today, but I hope to have a new Design Review post up soon. I’ve been working on ideas for it, but haven’t had time to write it yet. Hopefully later today.

This is the Thursday edition of Open House, and comments and trackbacks are now open. If your site doesn’t support trackbacks, use the Wizbang Standalone Trackback Pinger.

Update: This looks like fun. Making giant soap bubbles.

October 16, 2007

A bit of humor

Filed under: Humor — HDW @ 12:40 pm

I added a new blog to my blogroll today. Go check out Scheiss Weekly.

The A Tale of Two Essays post is a must read. Two of the worst pieces of writing I’ve ever come across. Here’s a taste of one of them. It may seem that I cut the quote in an odd place, but the whole essay is one sentence.

Lincoln was a tall man, much in the way that Andre the Giant was also tall, and with the same sideways heart and thick bones that made Andre the Giant look so much like a giant, and…

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