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My New Toy

November 5th, 2007

Ask and ye shall receive. Timing is, however, important. This is the time of year, or we are just getting to the end of the time of year when the bulk of our seminary subscriptions renew. So, feeling generous, Tim asked if I wanted any new equipment. I thought on it, and saw an ad on my Photoshop User’s magazine for a Wacom Intuos 3 Tablet. I’d been thinking about tablets and had no idea what they cost or which ones were good etc. So I got on their website and read up on this nifty device. After reading third party reviews, I determined this was the industry standard for my needs as a digital artist. So I told Tim and he was happy to oblige me. Two weeks later, a-hem, my tablet arrived from Amazon.com.

The font I designed this month for VDD Club is my first tablet project! I got the 6×8 tablet. The tablet plugs into my computer and with the pen they provide, I can draw on the tablet and it shows up on my monitor. It is a lot easier than using a mouse to draw with. And you can get special effects not possible with a mouse - it is pressure sensitive, and so when I press harder, the brush stroke is wider or darker. I am just learning how to use it, and this font is my first project! It came with some free software. I usually use Adobe Photoshop, but Corel Painter Essentials has some neat effects that Photoshop doesn’t have, and that is what I used to do the DWHScript Font.

Corel Painter Essentials is a beginner version of the more robust professional Corel Painter X. It comes with a large selection of media types - or pen/brush categories, and then within each brush category are several variants. I chose Art Pen Brushes as my brush category and Grainy Edge Calligraphy as my brush variant. Then I started writing my letters on the tablet with the pen it comes with. It was so easy! And if I made a mistake, guess what . . . on that same pen, on the other end is . . . lo and behold . . . an eraser! It works just like a real pen eraser, only better because it leaves behind no marks at all. I still feel more comfy with Photoshop so I saved the file as a jpg and opened it in Photoshop to isolate each letter as a separate file. Then I imported each character into my Font Creator software - had to rotate some letters a bit, sized and spaced them just right and saved and installed my new font! Then I made a sample page and uploaded everything to the website for Club members to download.

Anyway, using my new toy was fun and easy and I’m just getting started.

I’ll let you know how it goes from here.  Oh yeah, about my tablet, lucky for me I have a deep drawer where my keyboard and mouse reside, and the tablet rests either in front of or behind the keyboard just fine, without taking up extra space on my desk.  Otherwise I’d have to put it somewhere else when I wasn’t using it.

Debra

A Carting We Will Go

November 2nd, 2007

I admit it, I’m a big proponent of online shopping. Maybe the biggest reason is that I live in a fairly small Wyoming town that is hundreds of miles from larger shopping centers. Yes, we do have some local outlets, but our small Sears and Radio Shack franchisees are no match for company stories. And the largest big box retailers to move into town are not really big box. Our Home Depot and Office Depot stores are much smaller than the larger locations I was used to in Colorado or Utah. It’s 130 miles via freeway to the east to Rapid City SD and its Rushmore Mall, or 120 miles via single lane highway to Casper. But with my browser, I can shop anywhere and have it delivered right to my door, which does my severe sciatica no harm.

Consequently I see a lot of shopping carts. Latter-dayVillage.com uses a shopping cart we chose almost five years ago. We chose it then because it was compatible with the site design (colored tabs) we had at the time. That shopping cart software has evolved over time, adding features that have helped us grow our business and our ability to help our customers find products that help them in their church callings and family lives.

However, our shopping cart requirements have outgrown that software’s capability. We want to be able to offer more and more LDS oriented products from a single shopping source (LDV online storefront), which we believe is a real benefit to our users and browse-by customers. We are investigating two shopping cart solutions that will allow us to build an LDS shopping mall, if you will. The first is ZenCart, an open source shopping cart that is a branch of the popular OSCommerce project. The other is Xcart, proprietary software that has almost all of the features we are looking for. Ideally, we’d have a selection made and implement long before the Christmas shopping season, but we have not planned that far ahead. However, I will post information here as this project progresses.

If either of these solutions do not fulfill our requirements, we will expand our search until we find the best fit.

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