Tag: lists

  • 8 ways to drive a graphic designer mad.

    From ghisroy.com – Rants, Comics & other Sillyness.

    As everyone knows, graphic designers are the reason there are so many wars in this world. They get inside our heads with their subliminal advertising, force us against our will to spend money on the worst pieces of shit, and eventually, drive us to depression and random acts of violence. And of course, most of them are communists.

    So to do my part to save the world from them, i made a list of things you can do when working with a graphic designer, to assure that they have a burn-out and leave this business FOREVER.

    1-Microsoft Office
    When you have to send a graphic designer a document, make sure it’s made with a program from Microsoft Office. PC version if possible. If you have to send pictures, you’ll have more success in driving them mad if, instead of just sending a jpeg or a raw camera file, you embed the pictures inside a Microsoft Office document like Word or Powerpoint. Don’t forget to lower the resolution to 72 dpi so that they’ll have to contact you again for a higher quality version. When you send them the “higher” version, make sure the size is at least 50% smaller. And if you’re using email to send the pictures, forget the attatchment once in a while.

    2-Fonts
    If the graphic designer chooses Helvetica for a font, ask for Arial. If he chooses Arial, ask for Comic Sans. If he chooses Comic Sans, he’s already half-insane, so your job’s half done.

    3-More is better
    Let’s say you want a newsletter designed. Graphic designers will always try to leave white space everywhere. Large margins, the leading and kerning of text, etc. They will tell you that they do this because it’s easier to read, and leads to a more clean, professional look. But do not believe those lies. The reason they do this is to make the document bigger, with more pages, so that it costs you more at the print shop. Why do they do it? Because graphic designers hate you. They also eat babies. Uncooked, raw baby meat.

    So make sure you ask them to put smaller margins and really, really small text. Many different fonts are also suggested (bonus if you ask for Comic Sans, Arial or Sand). Ask for clipart. Ask for many pictures (if you don’t know how to send them, refer to #1). They will try to argument, and defend their choices but don’t worry, in the end the client is always right and they will bow to your many requests.

    4-Logos
    If you have to send a graphic designer a logo for a particular project, let’s say of a sponsor or partner, be sure to have it really really small and in a low-res gif or jpeg format. Again, bonus points if you insert it in a Word document before sending it. Now you might think that would be enough but if you really want to be successful in lowering the mental stability of a graphic designer, do your best to send a version of the logo over a hard to cut-out background. Black or white backgrounds should be avoided, as they are easy to cut-out with the darken or lighten layer style in photoshop. Once the graphic designer is done working on that bitmap logo, tell him you need it to be bigger.

    If you need a custom made logo, make your own sketches on a napkin. Or better yet, make your 9 year old kid draw it. Your sketch shouldn’t take more than 5 minutes to make. You don’t want to make something that’s detailed and easy to understand, because the less the designer understands what you want, the more you can make him change things afterwards. Never accept the first logo. Never accept the 9th, make him do many changes, colors, fonts & clip art. Ask him to add a picture in the logo. Bevels. Gradients. Comic Sans. And when he’s at his 10th attempt, tell him that you like the 2nd one the most. I know, it’s mean but remember: graphic designers are the cause of breast cancer among middle aged women.

    5-Chosing your words
    When describing what you want in a design, make sure to use terms that don’t really mean anything. Terms like “jazz it up a bit” or “can you make it more webbish?”. “I would like the design to be beautiful” or “I prefer nice graphics, graphics that, you know, when you look at them you go: Those are nice graphics.” are other options. Don’t feel bad about it, you’ve got the right. In fact, it’s your duty because we all know that on fullmoons, graphic designers shapeshift into werewolves.

    6-Colors
    The best way for you to pick colors (because you don’t want to let the graphic designer choose) is to write random colors on pieces of paper, put them in a hat and choose. The graphic designer will suggest to stay with 2-3 main colors at the most, but no. Choose as many as you like, and make sure to do the hat thing in front of him. While doing it, sing a very annoying song.


    7-Deadlines
    When it’s your turn to approve the design, take your time. There is no rush. Take two days. Take six. Just as long as when the deadline of the project approaches, you get back to the designer with more corrections and changes that he has time to make. After all, graphic designers are responsible for the 911 attacks.

    8-Finish him
    After you’ve applied this list on your victim, it is part of human nature (although some would argue weather they’re human or not) to get a bit insecure. As he realises that he just can’t satisfy your needs, the graphic designer will most likely abandon all hopes of winning an argument and will just do whatever you tell him to do, without question. You want that in purple? Purple it is. Six different fonts? Sure!

    You would think that at this point you have won, but don’t forget the goal of this: he has to quit this business. So be ready for the final blow: When making final decisions on colors, shapes, fonts, etc, tell him that you are disappointed by his lack of initiative. Tell him that after all, he is the designer and that he should be the one to put his expertise and talent at work, not you. That you were expecting more output and advices about design from him.

    Tell him you’ve had enough with his lack of creativity and that you would rather do your own layouts on Publisher instead of paying for his services. And there you go. You should have graphic designer all tucked into a straight jacket in no time!

    Blogged with the Flock Browser
  • 10 suggestions for success – from my friend Feisty Female’s blog

    1. Do something that you are passionate about. It must be worthy of your time, talent and energy.

    2. Take care of those you love – they are your priority.

    3. Be accepting of people you encounter and be nice to them – it costs nothing.

    4. Be bold, courageous and adventurous – trying and doing new things is good for your spirit.

    5. Be decisive and have an opinion – a state of oblivion should not be acceptable.

    5. Be forgiving – bitterness eats away and it most definately doesn’t add to your charm.

    6. Be optimistic, enthusiastic and cheerful. It impacts those around you.

    7. Loyalty and commitment – always a sign of character.

    8. Deliver on your promises. In actual fact exceed peoples expectations. Keep in mind that is sucks being disappointed.

    9. Don’t be over-critical on everything and everyone around you – it’s purely a questions of perception and you aren’t perfect either.

    10. Get moving and make things happen!

    View Original Article

    Blogged with the Flock Browser
  • there's a shopping list on my stoep

    i found this oddly intriguing list amongst my papers:

    Wednesday Yummies

    15 dried figs (500g)
    italian country bread
    fresh greens (watercress, rocket, baby spinach)
    black olives, pitted
    fresh rosemary & thyme
    olive oil
    wine vinegar
    1x lemon & 1x orange
    1x chicken
    50g vermicelli
    butter
    1x large red onion
    250g mushrooms
    mild curry
    ginger
    sea salt & black pepper
    white & red wine
    plain yogurt
    75g cooked ham
    parsley
    chutney
    puff pastry
    1/2 cup of sugar
    cinnamon sticks
    1x egg
    self raising flour
    —————–

    it’s in my own hand – but I have no clue as to what it was for.

    can you slap together a menu from this? (i want recipe’s people!)
    leave a recipe as a comment – or link to the recipe on your blog ;0)

  • Tree of Art in the Limpopo Province

    there’s an e-mail doing the rounds about an amazing art tree in the limpopo province. amazing as it is, this is not a real baobab that some savant spent half a millennium carving into a monument to his erotic fixation with martian women.
    sorry to burst the bouble, people, but these pictures are of disney world’s “tree of life“.




    awesome? certainly.

    worth clogging up every inbox south of atlantis? no.

    i wish people would think before forwarding bull:

    1. no-one sends you money for every mail you forward. spam doesn’t pay.
    2. the angel of death will not weld your rectum shut if you don’t forward spam.
    3. photos of mutant weredonkeys are fake. calm down to a panic and hit “delete”.
    4. no government or super lottery uses yahoo accounts. they can afford their own domains. duh.
    5. doctors, kings, princes and deranged necromancers that offer you gazillions of dollars from some unattended spanish inheritance trust in nigeria are evil. give them your details and the angel of death will disembowel your smurf collection.
    6. spamming 7 people in 7 minutes will not bring you great fortune in 7 hours. nor will your long deceased great grandfather knock on your door at 7am to ask for some fresca.
    7. spamming 70 people, though, will magically invoke the demonic twin of chuck norris. pull yourself towards yourself and run – this dude doesn’t wear pajamas…
    8. if you really want to know what color my underwear, favorite cyanide cocktail or answer to furry nipples is – phone me.
    9. i am not a better friend for returning/forwarding money-fairy emails. real friends will haul your delusional behind to the insane asylum, where nice people in padded rooms will talk to you about being napoleon and their passion for flying circumcisions.
    10. sending $50 to someone you don’t know is very kind. you will not, however, find a yacht in your slippers in the morning.

    *sigh* i feel better now.

  • Comming out some more

    In recent years I’ve learnt that standing up and saying: “I am…” is incredibly liberating. Not only for myself – but also for the many who suffer in silence, or cower in shadows.

    Like Jack Nicholson as The Joker in Batman – we need to give a name to our pain. For in giving it a name, we take away the mystery and the fear of the unknown. The answer to overcomming our fears, or obstacles, lies in the name as well.

    Here are the names I’ve taken ownership of thusfar:
    1) I am Afrikaans. It is my heritage and my reality. I am not scared of that name.
    2) I am Protestant. I do not denounce other forms of worship, but I do not identify with them either.
    3) I am Gay and I’m fine with it.
    4) My mom has cancer. We’re in it together – for Life!

    Today I realised that I have more to bring to the table. That there is another name in my back pack to share with the world:

    5) I’m Bipolar (type 1).

    I know others are out there – and I’m here to say: “We’re cool”.

    Good night kids,
    W