Archive for December, 2006

Factory Girl Movie Poster Contest

Monday, December 25th, 2006

I’m a little late to the game but I thought I would share this great little tidbit with you. Factory Girl is hosting a contest to design a poster for the movie. You’ll be able to download the contest package at FactoryGirlMovie.net which contains all you need to create your poster. And you can follow the rest of the directions on their site. I’m sharing this for all those artistically inclined so go forth and compete.
The grand prize includes the winner’s full sized poster signed by the cast of the movie, a private screening of the movie for the winner and 25 friends, and the winner’s poster advertised in their local area and on FactoryGirlMovie.net

Contest ends January 31, 2007. Good luck!

Happy Christmas And Merry New Years To All

Saturday, December 23rd, 2006

Well, the holidays has begun for me. I’ve officially concluded my christmas shopping today, though I do still have New Year’s shopping to do. My family celebrates New Year’s day together and serves as a gift exchange, part two of sorts. So it’s twice the fun of receiving gifts!

Right now, I’m in Kitchener, ON., celebrating Christmas with Douglas, my close friends Mike and Dave, and their family. It’s been a while since I’ve seen them so not only do I get to spend the holidays with them, I also get to relax and chill out. I’ll be back in Toronto, in time for New Year’s and until then, I wish you the very best and safe holiday!

Cheers!

Commercial Software Available For FREE

Sunday, December 10th, 2006

Indeed, commercial software is being offered for download for FREE at giveawayoftheday.com. Software that would otherwise cost you some hard earned cash could be available for free. Granted, you have a 24 hour window to download the software but did I mention that it would be free? It’s worth checking out, even if some of the software are obscure.

Need to resize an image quickly?

Sunday, December 10th, 2006

Try ResizR, a web application that will resize your image. Especially useful for those one-off resizes and you don’t have an image editor handy. There’s also Microsoft’s PowerToy Image Resizer which, after installation, will add a right click context menu that will allow you to resize one or multiple images at once.

I thought I would mention this for a friend of mine who wanted to resize an image to meet the requirements of an ad. I asked him what it was for and tried to explain resolution versus size which ended up confusing him even more. Anyway, I hope these help out anybody else that just want to straight up resize an image.

3 Great Places To Download Free Fonts And 1 Free Font Manager To Rule Them All

Sunday, December 10th, 2006

Oh god, I’m so cheese with that title. Anyhow, on with the article.

I usually start a design out by opening a new document and adding all the required text and elements I need, such headlines, details, legal and logos. Depending on the images, I need a font that will work well with the overall theme or vice versa. More often than not, people can work with a limited pool of fonts on unlimited projects. Such is the case with people I work with, and I wonder how they get on with it. Their prevailing argument is that too much time can be wasted going through the font list, which is true. Taking into account that I have 1200+ fonts at the moment, I do spend a fair amount of time trying to find that perfect font.

At this point, I have so many fonts that I haven’t had the need or inclination to find more. Whenever I’m looking for something different I pop on over to 2 great sites that offer free downloads of fonts. Granted the majority will be free but the fonts available can be freeware, shareware, demos or public domain depending on the use. The downloads often include readme files with details on what you can do with the font. SearchFreeFonts.com has a huge library of 13,000+ free fonts and 23,000+ commercial fonts. And DaFont.com offers over 7,000+ fonts which are sometimes available in both Windows and MAC. Each site has their own features with articles and tips sections, so check them out. Either way, that’s a whole lot of free fonts.

I prefer to have a variety when it comes to fonts and a great way to manage them all is to use a font manager. The Font Thing is a fantastic app that allows you to browse, install, uninstall, view, print, copy, and delete multiple TrueType fonts at once. You can also write notes for each font, categorize them by serif, sans serif, script and whatnot, preview and save sample text, and even place them collections. The best part is that it’s FREE.

Update: I have come across another site where you can download even more free fonts at UrbanFonts.com

Then, use this to manage them: The Font Thing