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We’re coming up on the official start of summer, Memorial Day. A long weekend, bar-b-ques, the lake, swimming pools, camping. It’ll be great. Summer is a care free time to enjoy life and overcome all of the obstacles that normally hold you down. As you dig out all of your gear, the bar-b-que grill, the long fork, your bathing suite, sun tan lotion and the beach balls, here’s a little something for you to chew on - an article that I wrote called “the Parable of the Beach Ball”, a story that talks about how you can overcome those who would hold you down.
Your Fellow “Creative Genius“, |
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OK. I hate the new WordPress interface, and I despise the fact that I lost all of my data and had to start over again. I tried for several days to restore the database to no avail. Anyway…lucky for me, I had saved all of my posts, keywords, categories and pages in backup text files. I finally took each backup post and manually recreated each post. If you find something missing, please let me know. Until then, we’re back in business. Look for rest of my line art examples soon.
I upgraded my site to WP 2.5.1 last night and it hosed by site. In the process of “fixing” the problem, I wiped everything out. I’ve tried restoring the database, but it isn’t working, so I am going to report everything. The dates will be messed up, but atleast all of the links will be there. If you have any issues finding something, please drop me a line and let me know. -Texaiano
Wahoo - The Board Game
I’ve been telling you about my Granny and Pa, as well as using their portrait to illustrate some photo to line art techniques. I’m working on one final article in the line art series which will tie these all togeather. Until then, let me share with you a game that I played as a child. We called it “Marbles” but most people know it as “Wahoo.” I spent many hours playing this game as a child. I hope that you can find as much pleasure in it as I did.
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Wahoo - The Marble Game
Materials:
Wooden Game Board
4 like colored marbles per player
Set of Dice (NOTE: only one [1] die is used for the game play)
I have been doing a series of articles about line art. In my first article, I spoke about how to use the graphics editing software to convert a photo into line art. The second article gave you a list of programs and techinques that would save you literally hundreds of dollars in licensing fees while simultaneously giving you the power of professional graphics programs. Now, I would like to show you step by step how I used the GIMP to create a line art drawing of my grandparents.
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First, as I took the portrait and scanned it, creating a digited version. To do this, I selected TWAIN from the GIMP menu (File…Acquire).
After the picture was scanned, I used Vidar Madsen’s method described in the GIMPy high pass filter sketch effect tutorial. Vidar shows you how to use the gaussian blur filter, merge opacity, desaturate the colors, then clean up the lines using desaturation. The results were ok, but nothing to write home about. I found a Photoshop plugin called Cleanup which might have made it more useable; however, I could not get it to work with the GIMP.
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Next, decided to start from scratch and try to render the line art by hand by “tracing” it from the photo. Melissa Clifton wrote an excellent tutorial about this technique on her website. I created a blank layer (Layer…Duplicate Layer), set the opacity at 50% (Dialogs…Layer…Opacity slider bar), and started drawing using mostly the pencil brush
to draw the graphic. Once the drawing was done, I had a little fun and colored it in, making look as though it came from a graphic novel.
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I wasn’t happy with the initial results because the details of the face were very unrefined. For example, in my initial drawing, Pa looked like he had alien eyes, and his mouth was all wrong. Granny’s eyes were roughly drawn as well. To fix it, I erase the insides of the faces and started over again. The second time, I experimented with different brushes. For example, I found the pressure brush
with a medium or small splatter point worked best for the details. I also took my time. The first go around, I finished in a couple of nights, but when I started over again, I went took approximately a month just to redo the faces. It was worth the wait, though, as I am much more pleased with the results.
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All in all, I would consider this a pleasant experience. When I was very little, I remember sitting on my grandparents’ laps, touching their faces and looking into their eyes. Nothing short of having them back could replace that memory, but this was the next best thing. Staring at the photograph, I was able to capture all of the lines of wisdom, all of the smiles, all of the worries, all of the love that gave charactor to two people who will forever hold a special place in my heart.
Now, go enjoy your family and make the world a better place by working on some photo family memories of your own.
Your Fellow “Creative Genius ”
,
Texaiano
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When I was young, I spent a lot of time with my grandparents, especially before I was old enough to go to school. Staying with Pa and Granny was the start of my love of photography. Since the family was spread out, Granny loved getting pictures, so much so that she put every single picture on her front wall. It was covered with pictures, most without frames. Granny used whatever was handy to pin or tack the pictures on the wall. I would sit and stare at the pictures and ask questions about the relatives, as well as seeking out the ones that I was in. It became a kind of game to see if I could point to the pictures and tell each person, where they lived and my relationship to them.
One year, Granny and Pa had their picture taken at one of the local photography studios. I don’t know how many pictures they bought for the family, but I do remember the framed 8X10 portrait that hung in the top left hand corner of the living room, between the gas heater and a small end table. I don’t have any good pictures of them so when I saw it hanging in a relative’s house, I asked if I could scan it. Now, here it is digitized for the world to enjoy.
How I cherish those times when I was a boy. I remember my Granny, a short farm woman, would get up every morning and make my Grandpa and me a hearty breakfast of eggs, bacon, sausage, buttermilk, orange juice, biscuits and gravy - for Pa, it was sweet-milk gravy (known to some people as Red-Eye gravy or white gravy), but for me, the house specialty - chocolate gravy! Yumm! It makes my mouth water just thinking about it.
After breakfast, we would go outside and I would play while my grandparents did yard work. Granny and Pa, having moved to the “city” from the country, remained true to their upbringing and turned their yard into a veritable Eden. There were peach and apricot trees, rose bushes, green onion plants, holleyhocks, honeysuckle, grapes, and raspberry vines. When they moved to town, Pa brought along a large sandstone rock that he placed in his yard and filled every day with water for the cats. Sometimes they would sit on the porch and watch the cars go by while I made mudpies. I would take water from the rock and mix it with dirt in Granny’s old butter bowls which I would then put in the trees to “bake”. In the afternoon, we would all take a nap then go back outside for more playing and car watching. Sometimes Pa and I would go out back to his tool shed. I’m never sure what he did in there, because he never made anything that I remember, but he had a bunch of old tools and nails and stuff that he would arrange and clean. While he did that, I would play with my Tonka tractors. Once in a while, Granny would get out her “marble” board and dice and we would play a game of “Wahoo.” (The board wasn’t made of marble, rather it was made of wood and used to play a game of marbles.) In the evening, it was back to the porch for car watching, and sometimes a snack of cookies and milk or biscuits soaked in buttermilk.
I count myself to be the luckiest of the grandkids. My dad was the youngest in his family, so all of my cousins were older. My siblings, who came along after my Dad remarried, didn’t have very many years with Granny and Pa before Pa died and Granny’s alzheimers made her into a different person. I don’t know if any of the older cousins got to know then the same way that I did because they all lived in different towns and didn’t get so see them as much. My Grandpa had a heart problem that caused him to be hospitalized over Christmas vacation my freshman year in high school. Since I was old enough to stay with him and since I was out of school, I got to keep him company all week. I don’t think anyone else of my generation was ever able to spend such quality time with him.
Many pictures. Many memories. If you don’t have a good picture of your family, I encourage you to go get one. In the very least, get someone to take a snapshot. Years from now, your family will thank you for it.
Your Fellow “Creative Genius ”
,
-Texaiano
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Have you ever thought about what you could do with your photographs? There are so many possibilities. For example, you could reduce down your photo to black and white, color it in, add a few thought bubbles and make your own comic strip. Or, you could create a clay caricature of the subject of your photo. You could transfer the image onto a square block of fabric and sew it into a heirloom quilt. You could turn it into a wood plaque carved with a scroll saw or a table top make with marquetry inlay techniques. You could create a 3D hologram, Warhol style pop-art print, or ascii art poster. Or you could turn your photo into a wire sculpture, ceramic mosaic or etched glass goblet. The possibilities are endless.
A key step in producing many of these object’s d art is to reduce the photograph down to a black and white line drawing. Graphic editing programs, such as Adobe’s Photoshop, provides automated ways to do this; however, unless you’re willing to drop $700 for a legal copy of Photoshop, you may think you are out of luck. The truth is, you can achieve most of the same effects, including the photo-to-sketch function, using the GNU Image Manipulation program, or GIMP. With GIMP, you can manipulate colors, reduce noise, selectively cut and paste objects within a photograph, work in layers, shrink or enlarge your image, and export your photo in a variety of file formats. GIMP even runs most Photoshop functions. Combine GIMP with other free software, like ImageMagick, a tool that lets you quickly manipulate graphics files, and Inkscape, which lets you convert to/from vector graphics formats, and you have a fully functioning graphics suite.
You can find tutorials on GIMP.org detailing how to turn a photo into a sketch. The resulting sketch is, in my opinion, very busy when this method. A similar method on Spoono.com produces cleaner results, though still too many lines for my taste. I prefer to use the method described by Vidar Madsen in his GIMPy high pass filter sketch effect tutorial. Using this method produces a drawing that is clean and simple, though I have to admit that sometimes, I prefer the old fashioned way…I fire up GIMP, create a blank layer and trace my image to create the line art.
Depending upon your project, I am sure that all of these methods will produce satisfactory results for you. Give them a try and let me know what you think.
Until next time,
-Texaiano
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In my last article about producing line art to use in your photo projects, I introduced you to the suite of programs that I use in my photographic endeavors, namely, the GNU Image Manipulation Program, or GIMP as it is more commonly known, Inkscape, a vector graphics program, and ImageMagick, an all around grapic toolkit with many uses. Both GIMP and ImageMagick can be used ran in batch from the command line.
One of my readers suggested that I provide a resource list to help my subscribers obtain and learn how to use those programs, so here it is.
GIMP
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GIMP.ORG - The Official site for GIMP, the GNU Image Manipulation Program. GIMP is a fully functional free graphic editing software with functionality similar to Adobe’s Photoshop(C), but without the price.
GIMP - Tutorials
The Book: Beginning GIMP: From Novice to Professional … by Akkana Peck
The Book: Grokking the GIMP
This is an excellent resource, and the best thing is, you can download the entire book for free.
Beginning GIMP: From Novice to Professional
Mono Conversion workflow and editing
Inkscape
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Inkscape - a free graphic editing and drawing program which lets you create vector graphics and diagrams. You can also import existing photos or graphics and convert them into vector diagrams. Inkscape is similar to Adobe’s Photoshop(C)
Inkscape - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
How to draw a diagram with Inkscape
ImageMagick
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ImageMagick - ImageMagick® is a software suite to create, edit, and compose bitmap images. It can read, convert and write images in a variety of formats (about 100) …
ImageMagick: Downloads
ImageMagick: Command-line Tools
ImageMagick: Command-line Options
ImageMagick: Command-line Processing
ImageMagick: Examples of ImageMagick Usage
ImageMagick - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Wikipedia Articles
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Photo manipulation
Scalable Vector Graphics or SVGs
Until next time,
-Texaiano
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The One and Only, Real Deal
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You will feel great this Christmas when that special someone, “the Apple of your Eye”, opens his new iPhone; however, the big payoff for you will come when he realizes that there isn’t another one like it in the entire world. How could it be, you ask? After all, Apple has sold hundreds of iPhones since they hit the market back in August. The reason it could be is because you took the time to customize the iPhone gift with your own photos, art work, music and recordings before you wrapped it as a present. |
Customization - Peel the Apple
For years, people have known that they can customize the ring tones on their cell phones by downloading clips of their favorite music files, and that they could enjoy personal photo albums on their mp3 players. For longer than that, people have been modifying their computers with their own personalized themes, background images and icons, but did you know that with the iPhone, where the computer, mp3 player and cell phone converge, you can do all that and more? Of course you did. That’s why you’re giving an iPhone as a gift; but why not take it one step further? Pull out that screen shot of your Paris Hilton spoof from YouTube, or the snapshot your son in his Transformers Halloween costume and turn them into customized icons. Take that picture of man’s best friend and turn it into a customized wallpaper. Record your children laughing, or that one-liner from your ongoing inside joke, maybe even the first few bars of your wedding song and turn it into a customized ring tone. Since iPhone has a web browser, you could even bookmark your sweetheart’s favorite sites, like your MySpace and Facebook pages, so that he could stay in touch easier.
Go on then. Just do it already!
So, are you psyched? Are you ready to do this? It promises to be more fun than a competetive round of ‘Dance, Dance, Revolution.’ Ok then, get to it. Click on the “2″ below to continue to page 2.
Part 2
Photo Album, MP3 collection, and Firefox Bookmarks
The first thing you want to do is to perform a full backup of the default configuration. You will also want to know that doing some of these customizations will void the warranty and that you will be unable to get support from Apple. Having taken all that into consideration, and being ready to deal with the consequences, the next thing you will want to do is to start uploading your personal photo album, mp3 and video collection. Use the iTunes interface to organize the files before you sycnhronize them to your iPhone. (If you need some suggestions, check out my playlist on FineTune.com.)

Now is also a good time to start the Firefox web browser and create bookmarks for your sweetheart’s favorite sites. (A saavy giver might even consider dropping hints for Valentine’s day or her birthday by bookmarking the website for her favorite Amazon.com seller, restaurant and florist, just so that all of the bases are covered.) The iPhone User Guide describes how to do all this, including how to turn them into custom wall papers. Keep in mind that if you select a large image to use as wallpaper, or if your image is “busy”, it will clutter up your interface, so be sure to optimize the image by shrinking it down and removing noisy elements of the picture before you turn it into wallpaper.
A Word of Caution - One Bad Apple Spoils the Bunch
Up to now, everything has been fairly straightforward. This final step is where it gets tricky…the “unsupported” part. Don’t worry, though. Everything is well documented on the internet. Again, just a reminder…if you haven’t done the backup, be sure to do so now. Also, remember that proceeding past this point could void your warranty. Scared yet? No? Ok. Let’s do it. Click on the “3″ below to go the final page of the article.
Part 3 - Conclusion
Sweet Music
For this part of the customization, you need to get a recording that you want use as a ringtone. Over at Lifehacker.com, they describe how to create an mp3 ring tone from a recorded file. If you are recording something yourself, be sure to keep it short. Likewise, if you are using a mp3 of your favorite Celine Dion song that you downloaded from the iTunes store, be sure to trim it down to a few bars. Smaller, shorter files are better when it comes to making ring tones.
Getting to the Core
Next, you will need to head on over to modmyiphone.com to get instructions on how to unlock your phone. Once the phone is unlocked, follow modmyiphone.com’s instructions on how to create a custom ring tone and do other customizations.
Keep the Change - or - NOT
The last step is to prevent iTunes from deleting the customized ringtones when you sync it.
There you have it - a one of a kind, remember me forever, thinking of you, customized iPhone.
One last thing. Remember that backup you did before you started? If you want to revert back, a process called “virgin-izing” your iPhone, you can restore from that backup image, a process described in the iPhone User Guide, or follow the method described on iphonegoboom.com.
Now that you have a one of a kind iPhone to give to that special someone, wrap it up quickly and put it under the tree before you decide to keep it for yourself.
Merry Christmas from your
Fellow “Creative Genius ”
,
Texaiano
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“Our service to others is the rent we pay for our time here on Earth.”
I heard this quote spoken by one of the speakers during the Sunday afternoon session of General Conference and just had to share it. One of the themes of Fotofamilymemories.com is building strong, happy memories. By rendering service to others, we create long lasting memories not only for ourselves, but also for those we serve. May your life be filled with many happy memories of service to your family and to your fellow man.
Until next time,
-Texaiano
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