Design House Digital

Posts Tagged ‘Digital Scrapbooking’

12 Days of Christmas- Garland

Hi there!

This is a quick little project. A 12 days of Christmas countdown garland. Each little shape has some candy inside to open and enjoy as you count down to Christmas.


First I started with some patterned paper from my Winter Woodland collection.

Then I cut out some simple shapes, and stapled them together at the edges.

I filled them with candy. Only a few pieces fit into these ones but you could make larger shapes to hold more if you wanted.

I created number labels and punched then out using my 2″ punch.

Then I tied the shapes to some twine. My kids love counting down to Christmas this way, and you could even do 25 days of Christmas.

Hope you enjoy this simple little idea.

December Artist of the Month

Decorator Shannon here bringing you December’s Artist of the Month. Allow me to introduce you to Amanda Caves, aka itsmeamanda. Her gallery is full of stunning layouts featuring her adorable little boys. Let’s get to know Amanda a little better!

Name: Amanda Caves

What camera do you use? Since October of this year, a Nikon D7000. Prior to that, a Nikon D50 (I love and miss that little camera!)

How long have you been digital scrapbooking? Since January of this year.

How would you describe your scrapbook style? Photo-centric. For me, it’s all about the images.

Where do you create, and when? I create in the corner of our toy/computer room, mostly on the weekends.

What’s your ‘go-to’ technique or trick? If an image is too noisy or the color is crazy wonky, I’ll convert it to B&W, which I do quite a bit.

What’s your favorite color combination? Neutrals and Greens. I love green!

Do you prefer movies or books? Books, definitely.

What’s your favorite snack? Currently, peanut butter cups.

What type of music do you like? Rock/Alternative.  Currently obsessed with Grace Potter & the Nocturnals

If you could live anywhere, where would it be? I’d love to live along Highway 30A on the Florida Panhandle….most gorgeous beaches and communities.

What five adjectives describe you best? Dedicated. Motivated. Impatient. Loyal. Busy.

I asked Amanda to pick a favorite layout from her gallery and tell me why she loves it. She chose this awesome layout:

And here’s what she has to say about why this is her favorite: “Because I actually managed to get a shot of my boys together, which rarely happens, and it just feels like Fall, which I love.”

Thank you, Amanda, for sharing with us! And congratulations!


13 Days of Halloween – Wooden Fork Dolls

Yeah, it’s October and one of my favorite months! I hope these frilly little witches inspire your Halloween season.

This idea was adapted from some fork dolls found in Amy Power’s On-line Magazine “Inspired Ideas”.

I’ve created a template with a witch hat, dress and tag.
FInd the link on my blog here.

What you need:

Printed Template
Disposable wooden forks (or you could try craft sticks).
Yarn
Scissors
Hot Glue

Glue

Sewing pins
Glitter
Trim lace
Trim pearls for necklace
Fine pen or sharpie
Hole punch for tag
Make, use or buy decorative elements (optional).

1-Print template and then cut out pieces.

2- Decorate witch hat with glitter and flowers. Let dry while you finish doll.

3- Tie yarn onto fork and wrap around top of fork to create a ‘bee-hive’ haird0. Tuck in yarn end when finished.

4- Draw face. I used the back of the fork for the face.

5- Fold paper dress and glue with hot glue to back of doll.

6- Attach trim lace to bottom of dress with hot glue.

7- Attach trim pearls to create a necklace at top of dress by hot gluing the two ends at back of doll.

8- Place witch hat on top of hair with hot glue.

9- Punch holes in tag attach to doll using one of the pins.

10- Attach more decorative Halloween elements if desired. ( I found the cute little spider stickers at Michaels.)

You can use these for party favors, cupcake toppers, or fun gift elements and more!

I hope you enjoy!

School of Design – Blogging Secrets 4

School of Design

Welcome to Design House Digital’s School of Design. Today, and every single day in September, we’ll have new blog posts; informative, detailed, and FREE classes that will take your digital scrapbooking to the next level. Each subject will have a new post weekly, and at the end of the month you won’t believe how much you’ve learned!

I’ve recently had several conversations with my boys about not talking to strangers.  I guess it’s been on my mind.  I’m going to give you a similar lecture!

Today I want to talk about Internet safety and privacy.  As a Digi scrapbooker, we do so many things online these days, and it is really important to keep our family photos and information safe.

Should my blog be public or private?

If you have a family journal blog, ask yourself this:  Are you OK with strangers stumbling on your blog?  How about people you know: bosses, neighbors, family members?  If the answer to any of these questions is no, maybe you want to lock your blog down.

My sister has a really great blog.  She writes in hers like a family journal: everything that she writes about is related to her family.  She has even had her blog printed into a bound book at Blurb!  Her blog is ultra-private: it requires visitors to be logged-in, registered users that she has already approved.

She has a good reason for it.  Her husband has a very sensitive job, and his company doesn’t allow family pictures to be posted on the Internet.

To make your blog private in Blogger, go to Settings > Permissions and select “Only these readers.” That will allow you to specify the people you want to allow to view your blog.

Blog locked down

Should my blog be open to search engines?

Another way to go private is to hide your blog from search engines.  Fewer people will stumble on your blog, but strangers can still visit.  It’s like having an unlisted phone number: only people who know your number will come.

If your blog is locked down, you still need to make sure your blog is hidden from search engines.

To hide your blog from search engines, go to Settings > Privacy and answer “No” to both questions.

Private Blog

I want a public blog!  How can I blog safely?

There are so many great things about having a public blog.  You can connect with new people who have similar interests, you can get ad revenue, and you can share with the world your really fun, useful projects and techniques!  My favorite public blog (besides our blog here at Design House Digital) is my sister-in-law Jen’s blog – The Project Girl.  Take a minute and check it out!

1. Have all email go through a “Contact Us” form with a CAPTCHA

If you want to let people get in touch with you, provide a Contact Us form that has a CAPTCHA.  A CAPTCHA is a box with funny looking text that you have to type into the adjoining box. It ensures a human and not a robot is filling out the form.

I don’t have instructions on how to do this with Blogger right now; I’ll have to cover this in a separate blog post.

2. Strip Geo-coding out of your photos

Did you know that if you post a photo taken by your phone’s camera, your Geo-location is most likely embedded in the photo?  Does that scare you? It scares me, especially when I’m posting photos of my kids. Luckily, you can usually change your phone’s setting to turn this off for good.

If you are using an iPhone:

  1. Go to Settings > General > Location Services.
  2. Look for Camera and make sure that it’s turned OFF.

If you are using an Android Phone:

  1. Go into your Camera app
  2. Click on Menu, then look for Geo-tag photos

You can also change the metadata in photos you’ve already taken.  In the Photoshop Elements Organizer, right-click on a photo and choose “Show Properties.”  The address will appear in the properties in the bottom-right-hand corner of the organizer.

You should remove Geo-tagging from any photos you post online, including on Facebook.

If you only post digi layouts, no worries! The Geo-tagging doesn’t carry over from your photos into your digi layout!

3. Don’t post your address on your blog if you can help it

If you’re not selling anything, there’s no need to publish your address.  Leave it off, and let people contact you via email.

I hope you develop a habit of safe blogging, and protect yourself, your friends, and your family.

By Mary

http://www.designhousedigital.com/content/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/ex-wonder1.jpg

School of Design – You and Your Camera 3

Welcome to Design House Digital’s School of Design. Today, and every single day in September, we’ll have new blog posts; informative, detailed, and FREE classes that will take your digital scrapbooking to the next level. Each subject will have a new post weekly, and at the end of the month you won’t believe how much you’ve learned!

Hi there! Allison here with some Manual mode SLR info. Shannon has done a great job the last 2 weeks introducing you to the auto and semi-automatic modes of your DSLR. As she explained every DSLR is different so please consult your manual (or my favorite Google) on how to adjust these settings on your individual cameras.

There are so many factors that go into using manual mode with your cameras. I’m going to discuss these settings today and next week share some photos I’ve taken and share what my settings were and why I chose them. I think that will help it sink in a little better.

Shannon shared a GREAT cheat sheet that we’ll use as we talk about your different settings.

click photo for source information

Each of these has an effect on your end result. I want to start with ISO because it’s usually the setting that I set first. 100-3200 is a normal range for a digital SLR. The lower the number here, the LESS sensitive your sensor is to light. The higher the number the MORE sensitive it is to light which is why in dark situations you’re going to want a high ISO and outdoors in full sun you can use a lower ISO. The lowest ISO you can use for your situation is (in my opinion) the best because the higher up you go the more noise (fuzziness) you’re going to get which does result in a loss of clarity.  So if I’m outside in the middle of the day I’ll choose 100, inside at night (and I’m not using flash) I’m usually at 3200 or in my cameras case even higher at the setting of  ”high”.

Next I set my Aperture. I choose this based on a few things – the look I want, and how much light I have to work with. Think of the aperture as the pupil of your eye. When you go in the dark what do your pupils do? They get bigger (in an aperture this is a small number like 1.8 or 3.2). When you instantly flash a light at them then shrink up and get smaller (a high number for an aperture like 11 or 22). So the more light you have the higher the number you can use (or smaller the aperture) the high numbers allow more of your scene to be in focus as well as usually results in bluer skies if you’re outdoors. The lower apertures result in a much softer background, less in focus, and will likely blow out more of your skies outdoors if you’re photographing anything other than the sky itself.

Shutter speed is how fast your shutter opens and closes (like your eyelids) the length of time it is open is where they get the numbers for the shutter speed. A shutter speed of  500 is when the shutter is open for 1/500th of a second. A lower shutter speed does allow more light in, but also can result in blurriness of your photo due to a moving subject or even camera shake. We can only hold those heavy cameras still for so long! A higher shutter speed will allow you to capture action and freeze time!

Exposure is how your photo will come out “light” wise. When you’re in auto your camera chooses settings so that your exposure is right in the middle at 0. A lot of people like to keep their exposure a bit over, but if you’re photographing say a large group of people who are all wearing black clothing your exposure meter is going to see things a bit differently so your photo will actually need to be a tad under exposed.

The white balance can be left on Auto which I think a lot of people do, but even the cameras modes can help your photo turn out much better. For example, if you’re taking photos indoors at night and don’t want to use your flash the tungsten or fluorescent settings will probably yield colors much closer to what they are in real life than your auto setting. For outdoors it’s a little less noticeable. Setting a custom white balance is the best way to achieve proper colors every time but it’s best to get all the other basics down before you delve into that!

If you want to practice some basic settings you could start with outside during the day are ISO 200, aperture 5.0, and see where your shutter speeds are landing you on your exposure meter. Usually adjusting the shutter speed is a scrolling wheel because it’s what you’ll adjust the most as you’re snapping away. If you’re taking pictures of kids, pets, or moving objects try to keep your shutter speed around 200 or above to keep them in focus!

If you’re indoors where it’s much darker you’ll need to bump up that ISO (like I said before I use high quite a bit), will have to probably open up your aperture (to 3.2 or lower if your lens can go lower) and slow down your shutter speeds. Again, if you have a moving subject getting down too low (below 100 or 80) will result in a blurry subject.

Here’s a little example of aperture changes – notice what happens with my iso and shutter speed as my aperture gets smaller (the number goes up). The aperture is also displayed as F-stop which is what the “F” means in these photos.

Because my camera is sitting on the table in these photos I’ll share an example of a low shutter speed vs. a high shutter speed.

Feel free to discuss or ask questions in our Photography Forum!

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