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Web Design

Blog Nosh Magazine Opens to Private Advertising and Evolves into Print

Less than two months in and Blog Nosh Magazine is growing by leaps and bounds, all thanks to you! In the pipeline, we have a very exciting site redesign with ease-of-navigation in mind, new channels (including Race & Ethnicity, Travel & Expats, and Personal Finance), dynamic new editors with even more diverse perspectives, and much more.

Today may be one of the biggest turning points for us, though, as we proudly announce that we are opening to private advertising! And for a very good reason:

Blog Nosh Magazine will soon introduce a quarterly print publication to complement our daily online magazine!

What serious blogger doesn’t dream of seeing their name in hard copy? Now is your chance.

Grab your piece of the pie! Cherrypie

One of the key elements of Blog Nosh Magazine is timeless content. As such, we plan to offer a quarterly literary magazine perfect for casual browsing-over-coffee-n-scones or in-depth reading during your daily (ahem) personal time. The ideal coffee table magazine that you can keep for years, so to speak.

Blog Nosh Magazine begs to have crumbs scattered across its pages, don’t you think? We do and we welcome you to be part of making this happen as an advertiser on www.blognosh.com!

(click title for more)



Missing Manny - A Photoshop Tutorial

Art design

Originally Published on Blog O’ the Baroness

Missingmanny_5

The illustration on the right was for the little reader The Case of the Missing Manny,
which was done for Imagine Learning. It happens on the set of a pirate
movie, so this picture goes with the page when our detective Ace is
interviewing Bob the costume designer. Bob, btw, hates pirates and
wishes he could design costumes for sci-fi movies.

I’ve put
together a big ol’ tutorial on how I made this illustration. I tried
keep it at the level of expecting the reader to know at least the
basics of Photoshop, but if you are an expert at Photoshop, then a lot
of the information will be old hat. If I’ve left big holes in my
explanations, let me know and I’ll be happy to make some edits.

Tools

Tools_4
These are the brushes I will be referring to throughout the tutorial. I
am pretty lazy with brushes - I stick with what works. All three
brushes are in the default brush palette. The only customizing I’ve
done is to save a couple more spatter brushes at smaller sizes. When
I’m in a real hurry while shading, I’ll just use the soft round
brushes. The downside is that you get a slick airbrushy look that I
don’t always like. The spatter brushes give me a little texture to the
brush strokes.

Some other general type information - I have two
different setups. At my Imagine Learning office, I work on a PC. I have
two 1200×1600 LCD monitors, an Intuos Wacom tablet, and Photoshop CS2.
There’s a screenshot of my desktop a little further down. At home I
have essentially the same setup, only with a G5 mac and PS CS3. I
personally prefer the mac over pc, but I’ve worked with both for so
long, that it’s not an issue for me. (Speaking of apple love, recently
got an iphone and they are pretty much lots of awesome .)

This
whole illustration was done in Photoshop from start to finish.
Sometimes I use Flash or Painter, but for this tutorial, everything I
refer to is happening in Photoshop, and I’ll be using PC commands. If
you use a mac, just replace Ctrl with Cmd.

Thumbnail

Mm03
Here is my first sketch, which is essentially a thumbnail, even though it is done at actual size but lower resolution (72 dpi). I’m using a small round brush. It looks like it was maybe at 30% opacity. I’m not consistent with that. This first sketch is just to figure out what is happening in the scene and work out the general composition. Before starting any sketches for the project, I had already done some research, finding pictures of costume studios, pirate costumes, etc. to help come up with ideas.

(click title for more)