Need a WordPress website this weekend? Start here...

Building Communities – Writing and Graphics with Heather Craik

(Reading time: 4 – 6 minutes)

Writers – to me – have always been incredibly interesting people. Writers come from every class, from humble and practically impoverished to scandalous and aristocratically wealthy.

No matter what kind of person, all writers are united by some strange compulsion to write. And by writing, I really mean creating and building and organizing and making sense of things. This applies to technical writers doing battle with engineers as much as science fiction writers working on the next 6000 word space opera. Or poets doing whatever it is that poets do. (I’ve been told I’m fundamentally a poet, maybe I’m too close to the flame to see it. I’ll attest to the heat.)

The bloggers I most closely relate to are writers at heart. Figuring stuff out. Building stuff. Creating stuff.

It should come as no surprise, then, that I wanted to interview everyone in Carlos Velez Pre-writing challenge. Next up is Heather Craik, from Scotland, that country north of England. Heather is a writer too, and writes on her blog The 3D Student, hosted on shadesofadream.com.

(Note: Heather is just now recovering from being hacked; getting restarted is always a little bumpy.)

WiaW: Why did you decide to start blogging?

Heather: Essentially I’m blogging to create a resource that I’ve never really seen addressed anywhere else within the 3D industry, at least not in its entirety. I want to make somewhere that people – hobbyists, beginners, those in the industry – can come along and learn little tweaks and tips that’ll help them work better, or even share tips of their own. Somewhere we can create a real community in a more structured setting than a forum, and where we can really raise issues and talk about them as a whole.

Courses do a great job of teaching you a broad range of skills, other tutorials can show you how to create specific things or general overviews to give you a rough idea of the steps involved. I want to make something that gets right into the blood and guts of the process, and not only shows you the techniques and methods, but lets you develop yourself and learn your own ways of working. Your own ways. That part’s the important bit.

On a personal level, I want to meet people, I want to share what I know, and ultimately I want to make some sort of an income doing so. It’s fun for me, and it lets me learn too which I think is really important.

WiaW: How does your graphics work differ, or will differ, from others in your graphics community?

Heather: At the moment I’m still finding my feet with my own style, and I may even be doing so for years. I’m new (ish) which means that at the moment I really get the chance to experiment and learn without being too locked into a particular way or method.

I like working with light and texture, and I enjoy making the effects themselves (think water, fire, explosions, dust, fireworks, etc); that’s the part that really kicks my brain into gear. After that it comes down to what catches my interest; I’m a huge fan of fantasy and sci fi so no doubt that’ll play a role.

WiaW: Is blogging popular in the graphics community?

Heather: Yes and no. I think that (like most niches) 3D has some really good blogs out there, some of which are pretty big and successful others are literally just personal blogs for tracking progress. Sadly, most of them pick up and are dropped again within the first few months, but I am noticing more appearing and sticking around; there’s a possible trend there.

WiaW: Where you want to take the intersection between blogging and graphics?

Heather: Blogging’s only the beginning for what I want to do. Basically I’m aiming to create a cohesive training platform/entertainment centre/community for Lighting, Texturing and 3D Visual Effects. My blog’s the start, but I’m going to be blending in ebooks (free and non), models, video, audio, portfolios, guest speakers, tutorials, comics, animations; I want to create something much bigger than myself or my blog. I want to take our combined knowledge, and make it easy for other people to not only learn what we do, but what works for them and what they can bring to the medium.

It’s a long way off, but I’ve got the time. We’ll see where it ends up.

Website In A Weekend – building communities

I’m occasionally asked what Website In A Weekend is all about. Aside from the literal notion of building a website in a weekend (all of which is here), it’s about building website-based communities. A large number of regular readers here are building communities, and if this is something you would like as well, stick around. There’s more interviews coming up, from both Pre-writing participants, and people outside our collective niche.

Technical Haiku – The Art of the Screen Shot With Techsmith Jing

(Reading time: 5 – 8 minutes)

Excellent screenshots will take your blog from so-so to superb.

Website In A Weekend readers ask “How do you create those killer screenshots?” so I’ve decided to spill the beans.

It’s simple: I use Techsmith’s Jing product, a free download (with inexpensive Pro upgrade) that will have you cranking out professional quality screenshots in minutes.

Jing is deceptively simple

Jing is so simple, it’s easy to miss how it’s simple features provide a lot of expressive power.

Using Jing is a little bit like writing haiku. In haiku, the rules are very simple, and very rigid. This simplicity and rigidity provides discipline for harnessing creative power. Jing has so few graphical elements (4), that your attention must be concentrated on communication instead of presentation.

What Jing does

Jing was designed to make it extremely easy to take screenshots and make short screencasts. You get to save in png for screenshots, and swf for screencasts. Really simple.

You have 4 graphical elements for annotating your screenshots:

  1. Text: you get a choice of fonts, and you can scale your text from very small to very large.
  2. Frame: Draw a rectangular outline in color for emphasis.
  3. Highlight: I don’t use the highlighting. First comment with an example of using highlighting I’ll send a whitepaper of your choice.
  4. Arrow: Draw readers attention to elements of your screenshot; connect text with boxes.

Each graphical element can be displayed with 1 of nine colors: red, blue, green, white, navy, purple, yellow, orange and black. Opacity and custom colors can be defined, but you can go far without ever using custom configuration.

Here’s an example screenshot, using the numbered list above. It’s “recursive,” I’m using the list and screenshot to support each other.

Jing graphical elements

Jing graphical elements

Jing is radically simple. There’s no rotation, no angles, and no curves. You can’t change the line thickness on frames. There’s no copy, cut or paste. Elements are stacked, and you can’t change the stacking order. In short, what you see is exactly what you get. The learning curve for using each tool is very short.

The learning curve for effectively communicating with Jing… well, like any path to mastery, it requires time, discipline and practice. Just taking a screenshot is no guarantee of effective communication. You still have to consider your audience, what you want to say, and how you want to say it.

Working with Jing

Some keys for working with Jing:

  1. Knowing exactly what you want to communicate. Confusing graphics won’t help confusing text. Get your story straight first.
  2. Understanding Jing’s capability. Jing does a very small number of things very well. Jing is so precisely designed for simple screenshots, that if you’re frustrated with it’s lack of capability, you’re attempting to use the tool outside of what it was designed to accomplish. In short, if Jing won’t do what you want, you need a different tool.
  3. Limiting the information on each screenshot. Each screenshot should illustrate one action or one process only. Do not embed a choice into your screenshot unless that’s the only point of the screenshot. if there’s two ways to do something, pick one way and show that. Use another screenshot to show the other way. There’s many paths through the forest, but you can’t walk them all at the same time.
  4. Using screenshots to support your text (not the other way around). Your story is in your text. Your screenshots support that text. Feel free to outline your article with screenshots, but without your writing to explain to your reader exactly what the screenshot means, you’re just wasting time and bandwidth. For example, note how I use the screenshot of the list of graphical elements to support the explanation of the graphical elements.

Jing can be used for more than screenshots. Consider the following image where I quickly laid out a chapter title page for an ebook:

Using Jing to communicate page layout

Using Jing to communicate page layout


That’s much faster and at least as spiffy as bumbling my way through the GIMP.

There’s more. You can create art using Jing. Check this out:

Simple structural elements provide ease of use of use and powerful expression

Simple structural elements provide ease of use of use and powerful expression


Will the tornado tear down the buildings? Will that camera get a picture? And what about that whirlagig, what’s that all about? These are good questions, but I’m not going to tell you the answer just yet.

Note: I didn’t claim you could create good art. But I have demonstrated Jing’s capability.

It’s not all roses

Jing has some annoyances. The user interface is non-standard, for no good reason. Yes, differentiating your product is good, but not by redefining standard user interface controls. For example, with the Pro version, you have to select between screencast file types in the global preferences menu. This should be part of the drop down choices when saving a screencast. It’s technically feasible, I know because I designed and coded similar capability into a product for a previous client. It’s confusing. Techsmith should fix it.

I could easily double the length of this article, but that wouldn’t leave you enough room to explore Jing for yourself. Or maybe it would. But it’s a nice day outside, it’s right before our Thanksgiving holiday in USA, and I need to do some work on the hRecipe plugin which is crashing for two European users. So your on your own for now.

If you have any fun techniques to share about using Jing – for any purpose – leave a comment. Even better, I’d love to have your experience with Jing written up as a guest post.