Sites I love

Some more very cool illustration design sites that I've found and love: hip.young.thing. This website profiles art, design, fashion, etc. and is updated really often. There is such a huge variety of really cool things on there.

Ghostco illustration with skeleton and skin layerghostco I really love this guys illustration - he is very amazing. I find his skeletal work especially interesting, as one of the papers I did at uni was just focussed on skeletons, muscle structure, then skin/outer layer. I love the way he makes each layer see through, so the structure is visible.

Emil Kozak This guy is awesome - he's a designer and artist and he's done artwork for skateboards, etc. etc. I love his stuff :-)

Cool website of websites

Cute gnome on ABC websiteRecently I stumbled across this website which is another website full of cool websites. Normally I'm only checking out gallery sites from Web Standards related groups, but this site profiles many Flash sites and a huge variety which is nice :-) Three of my favourites are: Ragnarok I have no idea what this is, but I would love to know! It looks like anime or a game or both? If anyone can translate I'd be grateful! I love fantastical stuff and I love cute stuff, and this combines both.

ABC Land The Japanese make everything SO cute!! This is apparently a real estate agency. You can make the gnome jump onto the branches of trees and roofs until he reaches the castle in the sky. I love the illustration and stuff! This site takes a while to download.

Farm Fashion designers?? Anyway a very cool site and I love their little cute things around the site :-)

Drawing tablets are fun!

Today I *finally* got my wacom tablet. Courier Post had it for almost a week, didn't deliver it correctly, were rude to me on the phone and so much for next day delivery aye! But that's another story - just don't use Courier Post if you want to get your stuff delivered professionally!! :-P Aside from that - the tablet is awesome it is so nice to use. (For anyone not so techy - it's a sensitive square and a special pen that allows you to write into your computer and also has pressure sensitivity.) I just got a basic wacom graphire, the cheapest on the market at $160.

By far the best is Photoshops understanding of it, the paint brushes are so much easier to use with the pressure sensitivity and it is so much faster to cut photos out of their backgrounds. I did this little photo cut-out and drawing this afternoon.

I have to say that this also made me discover something that I like about Vista - the built in tablet stuff is really useful. You can write in any application. To start with it couldn't understand my handwriting so well, but in the short time that I did it either I was learning or the computer was! it is still a much slower method than typing tho and too easy to make mistakes. One thing did dash my hopes tho - you can set customisation for an item and so i was hoping to set the right-click method to be Ctrl-click cause that's what I'm used to on a Mac and found I was doing it by habit on Windows. But no, the customisation in Windows seems to be limited to a couple of pre-setup options :-(

On the mac, the input is brought even another level cause the mac understands the pressure sensitivity as well as the handwriting. it is much easier to do the handwriting on a mac, not sure why but it comes out less scribbled. But unfortunately the character recognition is really bad, it could only understand one in every few words I wrote. But then I do have an older version of Mac OSX - I'll be excited to see if there has been development on this.

It will definitely be something that I'll use day to day instead of a mouse and for painting/drawing. :-D The writing thing is cool but typing is just faster and more accurate for me.

More Illustration

Recently I found the web designer wall site, and like many others instantly fell in love with the illustration in the header there. I was *so* happy when I found the tutorial on the technique. But after all, it's just pen tool tracing!! So I made my own, using the water colour painting I did for our wedding invites.

Illustration of an art deco flower pattern

Good practice anyway. The pen tool is my trusted friend! :-D

So then I checked out Veerle's blog and followed her tutorial on making badges in Illustrator.

Badges done in Illustrator

This was really good because a lot of the stuff like clipping masks I've learnt in the night course, but the use of layers in both of these tutorials and the depth effect in the badge one were new and very useful tips.

Oh and yes, I've been enjoying illustration so much that I've created a new category for it.

Illustrator night class - week 2

We covered some new stuff this week and I came out with some things I think are pretty cool :-) Two stuffed olives, drawn in IllustratorGradient Meshes are an automated way of taking an object like an eclipse and giving it some points to play with 3D type fills. The end result looks quite airbrushed. You could get very detailed if you wanted to, but I just started with some basic points and fills and came up with some stuffed olives!

Drawing of a toy rabbitThen we moved onto brushes which was cool. I'd heard great things about Illustrator brushes, and you can indeed come up with some very cool techniques. I ended up drawing a toy rabbit that had been left behind in the snow and gotten dirty (playing with the splatter brushes!). It was all drawn freehand with a mouse which is rather tricky...

Next week we're drawing a glass of red wine - exciting!

Illustrator night class

After using Freehand for so long, Illustrator is really frustrating to use! So I'd come up with a list of things that were bugging me, and enrolled for a night class at Natcoll. Page with curling corner drawn in IllustratorI felt so sorry for the tutor Claire, as she thought that she was teaching an Introduction to Illustrator, but everyone that is on the course are either full time designers or Mac operators! So she was a bit thrown and ditched her lesson plan for a quick overview of the tools in Illustrator. She did such a good job of it that all of my questions that I'd saved up were answered in one night!!

As expected, there were not the most beautiful results after the first night, but everything we did was really valuable. And one little personal victory - I drew a (purple) page with a curl *yay!*

Sneak peek - new website design

Collage and water colour painting to show my new website designMy wool still hasn't turned up for my cardi, I've finished Aaron's birthday scarf, can't do any gardening in this weather, and there are only so many cakes one can bake... so my creativity banks are fully charged with no other outlet than drawing, painting and design. When the weekend comes around I am sick of looking at a computer screen, so I grabbed out the water colours and started painting, cutting and collaging a new design for my website. It was so refreshing designing a website by paper.

Here's a sneak peek. The photo is very poor so it really is a peek instead of a preview ;)

Yay for Safari!

:-D I feel slightly happier with my work computer today because I can now use Safari on it :-D Every day I get so annoyed with Windows and I really miss my little Mac at home, so this is like a slice of home at work! *A true Mac person at heart* Screenshot of Safari running on Windows Vista

Safari for Windows is currently in beta (testing release) version, but the finished version will be ready later this year when Leopard is released. That is also when Aaron and I will be getting ourselves one of those gorgeous little macbooks *yay* :-)

Maori Market opening

Last night Kirti and I had the opportunity to go to the opening of the Maori Market exhibition. We had literally just launched the new website for The Pencil Gallery who are one of the exhibitors, and so Matt got us both tickets. They opened the exhibition with speeches from parlimentry ministers and some songs, which were really quite amazing. The majority of the people there were Maori and so everyone who knew the words joined in too, it was beautiful.

The art is breathtaking - a huge range of style and pieces - some stuff very traditional like carving and weaving, and then other stuff that is very contemporary. I have always had a liking for weaving and so some of my favourite stuff was the woven kite bags and in particular Alexine's woven bodice and skirts. She has woven beads in too, they are spectacular!

Something that always strikes me with artwork is when you see a piece in a book, magazine or in this case on a website - no matter how high quality the image is - there is nothing that compares with seeing the artwork for real. The amount of detail and texture in these pieces really blew me away, I think especially because I had already been working with photos of the artwork for the last couple of weeks.

Photojojo and blueberry pancakes

My photo of blueberry pancakes Today I got an email from Amit - one of the guys from a brilliant photography email newsletter called Photojojo. One of their upcoming projects is making a photo notebook, and for it they want to use a photo from the Flickr Photojojo group - and this photo of mine has been picked as one of the three possibilities. They're doing a trial run to see which one suits best, wouldn't it be cool if this one works out!? :D

A quick wee post with a cute wallpaper

Sorry everyone - I have HEAPS of entries to make on here, but haven't got around to it yet *so slack* But in the meantime, here is something for everyone! I have made a wallpaper of Cookie looking through a goldfish bowl. This is exactly what she does to our goldfish tank - very cute!Illustration of a cute cat watching a goldfish

I did the illustration in Adobe Illustrator. I found a tutorial for doing glass bowls, and it kind of followed on from there. I am used to using Freehand, but have started teaching myself Illustrator - and am completely loving it so far!

If anyone else is keen to do something with the tutorial, I'd be very keen to see what you come up with :)

Visiting Otatara Pa and my thoughts...

Moari carvingsAs we were leaving Napier we stopped in to visit the site of the Otatara Pa. A large town used to be on these hills in pre-European times, and this area used to be very close to the marshlands and inlets that were in the area before the Napier earthquake. Now all you can see is farmland. The tell-tale sign that there used to be a town is the terracing that was typical of Maori villages. They have erected some fences and carved poles, I guess more for the tourists than anything else (?), but it does give you a sense of the history of the place.

One thing I find the saddest is that the sites of old Pa are all around the country - and yet typically we don't even know about them. We happened to stumble across this Pa - it was not featured in any tourist brochures we read about Napier and the Hawkes Bay. Sites of battles, wars, and things that should be important to New Zealanders are now privately-owned farmland and the only way you can typically spot it is if there is noticeable terracing on the land.

The site of Otatara PaWe have a huge problem in our country as the government tried so hard to forget our past - it isn't taught in schools, and general NZ public don't know anything about what has happened and shaped our country. I feel this has a huge part to play in the general lack of identity that a lot of New Zealanders feel; and definitely obvious as you see so much ignorance about Maori rights, equality and land rights. For example, I think all New Zealanders should know about events such as what happened at Parihaka, and yet most will look at you blankly if you bring it up.

I think it's awesome that the Otatara Pa is open to the public, it's definitely good to visit. The whole walk takes about an hour, but even walking up the first hill is worth it (about 20 min return).

Webstock mini

Last night Webstock had a mini conference, a 5-9pm thing with three speakers and networking drinks between. It was really fun! It was great to catch up with CJ, Natcol people and meet new people like Dale. And the speakers were all really great!

First up was Natasha Hall who talked about some usability examples on Trade Me. She had a huge line-up of their top traders who they had visited to better understand how they use Trade Me and manage their business selling on there. I was really amazed at just how much some people earn on there, the average gross income of her examples was like $700k!

Russell Brown then stepped through his recent trip to California, and ohhhh I wanna live in San Fran now!! LOL I'm so easily impressed, but it was a very exciting talk because it seems that there are just so many possibilities and initiatives there that are made possible by funds that are so much harder to get here in NZ.

And last, but no way near least, was Nat Torkinton who talked about 7 points of Web 2.0. Over the last few months I have been getting throughly sick to death of this buzz-word, especially when it is mis-used by marketers who have no idea what they are talking about. But Nat's talk was really great because he sought to clarify "Web 2.0", with real emphasis on the sharing of data and cross application of it.

It was a thoroughly good night! The next large Webstock conference isn't going to be until 2008, but there will be many smaller events such as this through 2007 - a great idea and I'm going to look forward to each one!! :D

Web Directions Day 2

Andy Clarke's presentation was a great way to kick of WD Day 2 - he talked about Creating Inspired Design, really pushing creativity for all members of a team, even code developers. How can we use design to convey a deeper meaning about the website? And how can we start to think outside the square of web design into the level of creativity that you see in strong Flash designs? These days the tools are no longer a hurdle, our imagination is the limit (although I think he may have been thinking ahead a bit to IE7's release ;) ). One idea I especially liked is the collecting of anything that inspires you creatively - like keeping a scrapbook. It has been a long time since I have done this, and after his presentation I took a little crappy disposable camera and took shots of everything! The highlight of the day was meeting up with Andy over morning tea. We had a quick wee talk about stuff, but I can't believe it - he remembered me from leaving this comment on my blog!! Then after that he editted the connection thingee to say crush and cute lady! Cheeky!

Laurel Papworth's presentation on the business of online communities was great, there were some really good stats there that I shared with the others; such as 9 times more visits that last for 5 times as long when you have a genuine online community on your website.

Jeremy Keith did a presentation of implementing unobtrusive Javascript practices with AJAX (aka HiJAX). I found this really valuable as I have spent so long teaching myself the best practices with CSS and seeing the major advantages that come of seperating presentation and strucutre, I would love us to apply these theories to the Javascript too. I just wish that Damian was there to see this presentation, cause I don't think he believed Kirti and I LOL! ;)

Poor Kelly Goto was loosing her voice by this stage!! However she powered on and gave a brilliant presentation on using the SCRUM practices alongside her Workflow practices. I first saw Kelly a year ago at the Web Essentials conference, and since then we have changed the way we approach our projects entirely. So it was very interesting to hear her developments, and I'm really looking forward to getting some time to look further into the SCRUM stuff. This is where you break your projects into three week blocks and at the end of each block there is a working functional result. She also gave a few more pointers on how to implement this succesfully.

What an awesome conference!! We didn't want to leave...! :( Kirti and I were too late to the after party though :( because we kinda got distracted by the shopping en route *blush* but I bought a really cool top for $10! *blushes more*