Wednesday, November 26, 2008

I Get By with a Little Help from My Tools

There is a risk that I might never see the sunshine again. I just discovered the "tablets" that attach to a computer to help the user create and manipulate graphics. They have a pad that works like a drawing board and an inkless pen that's really just another kind of mouse. Between the software that can morph my photos into "paintings" and the freestyle drawing and "painting" capabilities with the pen, I'm in heaven.

I sought out this tool as a practical matter. I wanted to create some personalized banners and other graphics for my blog, websites, and various documentation projects. Using a regular mouse to "paint" was, well, like serving soup with a bridal veil. It was just a plain mess! On top of the visual aspect, my repetitive stress injuries flared up like a bonfire. I see the purchase as an investment in my sanity and physical well-being.

It comes at a very good time, too. This new device is a great distraction from my job concerns. You see, I work for a financial arm of one of the big three American automakers...and we have not had a good week. In addition to worrying about just having a job, I have to apologize for the cluelessness of the people at the top of my food chain. It's embarrassing, actually. I walk around with dark glasses, a scarf, and a trench coat in hopes that no one will recognize me.

It's not like I didn't try to counsel them early on. For years, whenever they posted an announcement on our company intranet about one of the new overpriced, gas-guzzling, ozone depleting, carbon-spewing monstrosities in their line-up, I would post in our discussion forum a request for more compact cars with high mileage...an American version of the Prius, Honda Civic hybrid, or, dear heart be still, the Insight with 50+ miles per gallon. Their response would be a short blurb about the company investing in fuel cell technology...something that certainly won't be viable in the near future.

And I identified a need for a reality check when the CEO visited our small corporate offices in Pennsylvania a few years ago. As we saw co-workers going through the first of what turned out to be many lay-offs, this gentleman talked to us about the need to purchase the company's vehicles. He regaled us with a story about how his kids were just turning driving age. With all of the new cars he was buying to satisfy their transportation needs, he was running out of room and trying desperately to purchase his neighbor's property for the garage space. We were to empathize with him. I notified my managers of the necessity to provide this manager with some sensitivity training. Apparently, no one in Detroit received my message.

So, I immerse myself in things that keep me off of www.bloomberg.com and the Wall Street Journal site and from fretting over things I cannot control. These distractions include seeking out new opportunities and learning new skills.

Notice Anything Different?

First order of business was to redesign my blog. This blog was my very first attempt at blogging. When I set it up, I used a Blogger template and made a few changes that were facilitated by the functions in the Layout and Settings options. It was okay. I liked the green but I felt restricted by the template.

Let's compare. Here's a shot of the site on the first day:


While you can see what it looks like now, it will probably look different months from now. So here is a shot of the current view:


It's Not Just About My Opposable Thumbs

I started the redesign with a Blogger template (one called "Stretch Denim"). But the template was not quite the look I wanted.

To take it further meant learning how to use new tools. As I discussed above, I acquired a "tablet" to work on graphics. The tablet came with Adobe Photoshop Elements 6.0 and Corel Painter Essentials 4.0. Lightweight tools, I'm sure, for serious graphic artists but these are good beginnings for me.

For the banner, I created a rectangle and filled it with a gradient palette offered in Photoshop. The photograph is from a trip to Casa Loma in Toronto this past summer. Some cropping along with contrast, saturation, and highlighting adjustments in Photoshop gave it a new life to symbolize traveling a path - walking through a process, an experience, life in general.

The other tool I'm excited about is html - Hypertext Markup Language. When I talk to my S.O. ("significant other") about it, he looks at me sideways and tells me that my enthusiasm for html is further evidence that I am not cool and have no hope of ever being cool. But I don't care. Because, with practice and some more time working on my design sensibilities, I can use html to make my web material look great. While I could make a lot of the changes I wanted using the Blogger check boxes, there were some that I could not.

For instance, take a look at the statement in the banner. The heading is an ivory color while the mission is a dark blue. Blogger defaults to making both sets of text the same color. By adding just a little bit of html code, I was able to assign a different color to the mission.


I also had issues with the margin of the text in the banner. Blogger doesn't provide any tools to adjust margins. The text appeared over the image when I first added the banner. A couple of changes to the html code and I had this lovely left margin politely off to the side of the image.

Keeping It Clean

Other aspects of my redesign involved removing excess color. I've decided, after a lot of critical review of web sites and blogs, that I much prefer light or white backgrounds for text. Bold color is good when the site consists of primarily graphics. But a heavily text populated blog like mine needs more light colors. Plus, the big green margins on either side of the old design took up too much space and made each blog entry seem interminably long.

I kept the typeface simple - substituting Verdana for a serif font throughout the body but using Georgia for the top header to make it stand out. I may substitute another color for the green I used for visited links and dates. It could be a little hard to see.

I'd Like to Thank My ...

I received some very helpful direction from my design professor and classmates at NJIT but not everyone has access to them. (Too bad for you!) I also got a lot of useful information from:
  • The wonderful tutorial that came with my tablet (a Wacom Bamboo Fun tablet). I was surprised at how helpful and thorough it was.
  • A book called "Sams Teach Yourself HTML in 10 Minutes". It was amazingly helpful and broke out the lessons in easy to manage chunks. It has a prime spot next to my computer now.
For now, I'll look for some vitamin D fortified soy milk and force myself to take a walk a few times a week. Now that this door is open, I'm in real danger of becoming a hermit.