Smashing Full Moon Images

This post points to two photographers who have mastered the Full Moon in extraordinary ways.

The Idea, the equipment, the execution

The first example comes from Switzerland, where Philipp Schmidli, a professional photographer, ran after hist exceptional Full Moon shots since January.

Swiss Full Moon

© Philipp Schmidli

Click on the image to have a look at Philipp Schmidli’s site where he explains the set-up.

The image was taken with a Canon EOS 1 D X, Canon’s flagship camera and a 600 mm telephoto lens with a 2x extender to fire with 1200 mm.

The second shot is from the USA where Filmmaker Bryan Smith and shooter Michael Schaefer got the grip on Dean Potters ‘Moonwalk’.

Here as well, a long focal length lens from Canon was used, this time an 800 mm with a 2x extender, tuning it up to 1600 mm. Shooting distance was over a mile.

The two shots show that the most spectacular images are shot with high-end lenses to handle the exceptional angle

Ycademy Seminar April 2013

Ycademy Seminar April 2013

The Ycademy Seminar April 2013 is in full swing, lasting from 20th April to 21st April 2013.  With Internet users shifting their attention more and more towards handheld mobile devices – smart phones, iphones, ipads and the like – there is an urgent need for responsive websites, meaning responsive web design.

“Responsive’ here means that our website content in form of text and media adapts automatically to the form and shape of any device.

Ycademy Seminar April 2013 Design by Bianca Gubalke

Hence, the need for a new responsive script arose. After working for years on Semiomantics XO, this month’s Ycademy Seminar focuses on the new release of the latest, the finest and the hottest WordPress based responsive script : XR!

Ycademy Seminar April 2013

Therefore, the motto of this month’s Ycademy Seminar April 2013 is ‘responsive’. It’s more complex than one assumes as we can’t just switch to a ‘XO responsive’! The fact is that a dramatic change has taken place to keep us at the forefront of modern web developments, and the brand-new XR was born.

It’s a new era! A new start! A new challenge!

Fortunately, as Semiomantics experts we already have a good foundation as to what is needed in technical terms and skills. At this seminar we want to deepen and refine it. One needs to learn how to work easily and effortlessly within the new environment. This requires more knowledge and skills in terms of Code, i.e.html 5 and css 3. And, much more!

So here’s to today’s Ycademy Seminar on XR – Theory and Praxis: How to edit, configure, optimize and customize XR.

Based on the full XR developer version, we will go through all the features, learn how to replace our XO, and how to create Child Themes for XR.

Just look as this website here evolves on the newly integrated XR!

Bianca Gubalke Showcase 2012

Original article by © Bianca Gubalke

 

 

 

Getting started with Edge Animate

In this tutorial, we’ll be getting started with Adobe’s new animation tool, Adobe Edge Animate. Edge Animate harnesses the power of HTML5 animation, and allows the user to create dynamic, exciting web-based animations in a quick, easy and fun way, using a user-friendly timeline-based interface as opposed to blocks of daunting code.

In our first video for Edge Animate, “Getting Started”, we’ll be constructing our first animated banner. You’ll learn the basics of becoming familiar with Edge’s interface, as well as the following handy techniques to get you started on creating your own animations: using the key framing tools to bring your text and images to life; harness animation easing techniques to accelerate your elements on and off screen; grouping separate objects as an element, then animating them at the same time; we’ll also use actions to create a clickable button that takes your visitor to your desired page.

Once you’re finished, you’ll be able to apply these techniques to your own creations, allowing you to produce your own dynamic web elements.

 

Have you tried Adobe Edge Animate? How useful did you find it? Let us know in the comments.



Type & Grids: Responsive HTML5 Template – only $27!


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How to develop a responsive workflow

ThumbnailRemember the good old days? You know which days I’m talking about; the days not so long ago when we used to design websites to fixed widths. Looking back now they seem like such a simpler time; a happier time; a time when I could recite every font that was available to use online without a second thought. The truth is that Responsive Web Design changed everything. The world was flat and now it’s round, I was blind and now I see, the web was pixels and now it’s percentages.

With the introduction of RWD, it is vital that we as designers evolve our workflow to better suit the demands of the new web. Many of us have voiced our frustrations on how Photoshop’s fixed pixel approach is unsuitable for designing the fluid layouts needed for a responsive website but no useful alternatives have been offered. The web design world is desperate for a bespoke software that is built from the ground up with RWD in mind. Products like Adobe Reflow are a great start, as it shows that Adobe are at least working on a solution, but after spending a few hours with it at the weekend, I can see that it still has a long way to go before it becomes a useful addition to my workflow. With us being in limbo between a pre-historic software and the promise of what’s to come tomorrow, we are having to create alternative workflows to accommodate the shortcomings of our current ‘design software’ by introducing other tools and procedures that will help bridge the gap between fixed pixel and fluid responsiveness.

The following is by no means a list of how RWD projects should be approached, but rather how I have adapted my workflow to suit the new landscape.

 

1. Use what you know

I have stood on the border between the Photoshop/Fireworks/Illustrator divide as each have battled for supremacy and have witnessed innocent people get caught in a crossfire of pixels. Designers tend to have their favourite and would rather die a slow painful death than admit that another software has a feature that they might actually want. My view is that you should design in any software that allows you to work at your most efficient and explore your ideas quickly, be it Photoshop, Powerpoint or Paint.

It’s almost irrelevant which you choose as it should just be a starting point for quickly experimenting with different layouts. Personally, I prefer Fireworks as it ticks more of the boxes of what I want in a software. I try not to get heavily stuck into details at this stage and really try to just make some preliminary decisions on layout and structure much like some posh wireframes.

 

2. Use real content

Everything that needs to be said about the use of Lorem Ipsum in site mock ups has been said so please just trust me on this one and where possible use real content to design from. Where not possible, use last years content, write your own content or use the lyrics to ‘Candle in the wind’ but don’t use Lorem ipsum. If you don’t use real content, it will be difficult to see at which break points certain elements need adjusting.

 

3. Start at 1000px wide

This is just the width that I like to start at as it is close to a small desktop experience, which is then easy to scale up for larger screens and down for tablet / mobile experiences. Some people prefer to start wider whilst others prefer to design mobile-first, it just comes down to what works for you.

 

4. Play the percentages

RWD is all about fluid containers that grow and shrink to fill the browser’s available area, so designing in percentages rather than pixels will ensure that your designs flow in proportion to the browser and require less break points than the equivalent pixel based design.

I tend to have In-Design open in the background so I can easily and quickly find out a percentage size of a pixel based element. InDesign is great at handling these kind of calculations and you can easily find out what size a 428px x 333px element will be at 46% of its original width, whilst keeping it’s proportions or maybe find out 27% of a 889px browser width in seconds. The results are still given to you in pixels so you can then go back into the software that you are designing in and create that container in pixels, knowing that it will be relative to the percentage of the workspace that you have defined.

 

5. Create your typography styles in the browser

If you think I bang on about using real content within your designs, you should hear me go on about designing typography styles in Photoshop (or equivalent). Typography will look vastly different in the browser than it looks in the usual Adobe packages which will mean more work for you tweaking the design once it’s built.

Save yourself the headache and use apps like typecast.com to experiment and create your font styles with. Once you are happy with the layout and style of your typography, you can export your entire workspace as a transparent PNG to place within your design mock-ups. You won’t need to have any of your chosen fonts installed onto your system as it will just be an image but you will also not be able to edit it without going back into typecast.

 

6. Create your grid

By now you should pretty much have your design at 1000px wide (or whichever width you chose at the start) completed with the widths of the containers that hold your various content translated into percentages. I would now start to create a bespoke grid that mimics the container widths that I use within my design. So if I have a sidebar that is 30% wide and a content area that is 55% of my browser with 5% padding either side, my grid may look something like 5%, 30%, 5%, 55%, 5%.

You can use apps like Gridset to build your bespoke grid but again, I prefer to use InDesign as you can group elements and have them resize in proportion to each other.

 

7. Time to break it down

I now take my grid that I have created using InDesign and paste it into a 1600px wide (or the max width that you want your site to be) document. I then start to resize my grid wider and narrower by increments of 100px all the way down to 300px wide. At every increment, I check the width of each content container and make sure it is still large enough to house its content. When I get to a width that I think makes a container too small, I simply edit the grid to fit. So if at 800px wide the sidebar that I had created at 30% of the browser width becomes too narrow, I could add an extra 10% to it, making it now 40% of my browser width and being wide enough to house its intended content.

The key thing to remember is that if you make a container wider, you need to make another container narrower by the same amount to maintain the 100% entire width. This is the best way that I have found to define break points (the point at which your layout will change) as you only add another breakpoint when the content breaks and not to the width of a new device. This procedure can be time consuming as you will end up with 14 different previews of your grid as it grows from 300px to 1600px wide but it is the best way that I have found to check how your design will look at different screen widths before it’s in development.

Another option is to use a tool like Adobe Reflow that also allows you to add content to containers and then drag your workspace and see the elements scale. You can also determine your break points by resizing your workspace until the content breaks and simply adding a media query. Reflow is still in public Beta and can be downloaded from here.

 

8. Add some polish

Having scaled your designs down at increments of every 100px, you would of identified a few widths at which the content breaks and rectified it by adding a breakpoint. You can now go back into the software which you created the original designs in and change the layout of your design at the widths that you identified as break points. This means that you end up designing only 2, 3 or 4 different layouts (depending on the complexity of your grid and how many breakpoints you need) that will cover all the way from 300px to 1600px.

 

9. Deliverables

If you have followed this process, you should now have a set of layouts that match your break points, a document that shows how your grid is made up of percentages of the browser width and how it collapses for smaller screens as well as all of your typography styles already created and tested in the browser. This should be a very strong point for a developer to then start building your designs accurately and without having to deal with content breaking at certain widths later on.

This process may seem very long winded but without a specific tool built entirely for RWD, it is the best way that I have found to easily test my responsive layout using non-responsive software and clearly communicate my ideas to a developer. This is by no means the one and only way to approach a RWD project, but it’s the best I’ve found.

 

What has responsive design changed about your workflow? What tips would you share? Let us know in the comments.

Featured image/thumbnail, flow image via Shutterstock.



Type & Grids: Responsive HTML5 Template – only $27!


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Psychic Readings Online

Psychic Readings Online

Psychic Readings Online by Delia O’Riordan celebrates its first anniversary online! We at the Semiomantics Team wish to congratulate the eminent psychic reader, who is well known under “Just Ask Delia”, for taking her offline business into the competitive Internet arena and building a professional reputation based on knowledge, decades of experience and – what counts most in this field of expertise: intuition!

Psychic Readings Online by Delia O'Riordan

If links are cut on a syndicating website, go here: http://psychic-delia.com and find the shop on the BLOG (navigation menu).

Psychic Readings Online

Psychic Readings Online started its journey exactly one year ago on the anniversary of founder and psychic expert Delia O’Riordan.

Quietly and far away from any noise and hype, this elegant website which offers a fabulous wealth of knowledge and information has carved its way into that apparently vague region “…between heaven and earth…” that may not be seen or sensed by most human beings, but where there is this fascinating ‘more’ of many things that we are all after yet may have difficulties to fathom.

Just Ask Delia

“Just Ask Delia” is for the serious, discreet searcher.

What do I mean?

If you are not on this quest yourself – which often but not only means investing into your own research studies, workshops, yoga, meditation and prayer to name a few – to find answers to the most important questions in your life and the way it’s enfolding – be it in the areas of career, love or destiny – , and your emotional stress is building and affecting your health and wellbeing, however, you don’t know where to turn to find – within the global haystack of  competing psychics, mediums, astrologers, specialists, channellers etc advertising their supernatural powers on the web – that professional, serious and extremely dedicated and precise psychic consultant that you may want to entrust with those haunting questions that so urgently need an answer – then… “Just Ask Delia”.

It’s fast, affordable and you will have your answers to work with – just click on the image below and check it out.

Book Your Psychic Reading Online Today

Book your Psychic Reading Today

What better proof than Psychic Delia clients returning after years, thrilled to finally find psychic reader Delia O’Riordan Online, and say how right her psychic guidance had been at the time, seen with hindsight after years… and booking a new consultation on the Psychic Delia Shop today?

What are you waiting for – CLICK HERE to find out more! Easy from your mobile phone…

 

 

How to use the Crop Tool

How to use the Crop Tool on Google

In my previous article HERE I explained how to use the crop tool in the new Adobe Photoshop CS6. Here I do my daily SEO and monitoring to keep an eye on how my articles perform on Google Top 10.

How to correct lines using the Crop Tool by Bianca Gubalke

 

How to use the Crop Tool on Google

On the above screenshot you see the performance of my above article on how to use the Crop Tool on Google – an amazing rank 1 on 349,000,000 search returns! That’s the power of a WP based Semiomantics XO Script set up properly and correctly edited and published. You must agree a smashing result… and this within less than 24 hours!

As we’re currently still busy with the Ycademy Seminar (June 2012), I can add another interesting fact about the Crop Tool: even after cropping, I can still move the image ‘below’ the ‘cropping frame’ to position things optimally. While I did not find cropping a difficult task in previous Photoshop versions, this definitely saves time and hence presents an excellent addition to the new Photoshop CS6.

 

 

Redefining a Blog using Semantic Markup

Redefining a Blog using Semantic Markup

“You never start with a blanc page, do you?” I was asked at this morning’s breakfast table. Well… my answer was: “Yes, we do!” and promptly that’s what I started out to do today, continuing from yesterday’s post HERE and following the next basic exercise in “How to learn HTML5 and CS3″: Redefining a Blog using Semantic Markup.

Redefining a Blog using Semantic Markup exercise to learn HTML5 and CSS3

 

Redefining a Blog using Semantic Markup

“Redefining a Blog using Semantic Markup” is first of all about getting rid of the ‘divitis’ syndrome – meaning the usage of div tags – while exploring the elements that create a simple blog structure containing a typical header with a horizontal menu (navigation) underneath it. This is followed by the main section that contains the content in form of articles, that may each have their own header and footer as well as an aside (which may be a pullquote as in my example here). To this we add a sidebar with additional navigation. The page typically ends with a footer for the copyright note and possibly further information like Home, About and Privacy.

Redefining a Blog using Semantic Markup Exercise

Starting out from a blanc white page on my PSpad, I simply followed instructions and tried to understand what I was doing, what was known and where the differences were – creating an index.html page and a style.css – and getting the desired result. Nothing special, nothing designed to look great yet – just an exercise where “Learn by Doing” is what counts.

Another interesting difference I observed: this is all that’s needed at the top of the html page: <!DOCTYPE html> … talking of lean management!

Bianca Gubalke Showcase Image

I will certainly continue the journey…

How to learn HTML5 and CSS3

How to learn HTML5 and CSS3

It’s one thing to follow a gifted teacher through live HTML5 and/or CSS3 demonstrations and lessons, clicking here and there on command with hardly a second to breathe never mind moving one’s thinking muscle  – and another to have a real good manual in hand on how to learn HTML5 and CSS3 independently and at our own time, where we can make those pauses after a fullstop and allow ourselves to think, connect and – in the best case – understand… before moving on.

How to learn HTML5 and CSS3 Image by Bianca Gubalke, Noordhoek, South Africa

 

Of course, in both cases complete comprehension of the complex matter is never guaranteed, however, we become part of the learning and development process and the new lingo and sometimes wildly abstract scriptlets start sickering in…preparing the terrain for that ‘aha!’ or deja vu experience sometime during our journey through what is structuring the groundwork for future web developments and better, modern web applications and setting new standards.

This process is not completed; HTML5 and CSS3 are definitely works in progress – and as students we are part of it!

 

How to learn HTML5 and CSS3

You may think that you know HTML inside-out and why on earth waste time on how to learn HTML5 and CSS3?

Getting a good Overview

Well, everything on the Internet is about change… and I believe in getting a good overview first. Very quickly we learn that amongst others:

Structural tags and attributes as well as presentational elements are no longer the same; many are deprecated today and we have to know which to use in order to have clean code and a website that works and is responsive.

On the other hand, CSS3 provides us with some astonishing styling elements that we could formerly only achieve with images we first created in programs like Photoshop, eg. drop shadows and elegant gradients.

Frames – frame, frameset, noframes – were known as a constant cause for errors and problems. Accordingly, they were dropped to improve usability and accessability that are so critical for interaction with readers and customers on our sites.

There is more, much more… and I will provide some insight as time allows. Surely, as dedicated website developers and designers we have our customers’ interest at heart and – especially with the rapid evolution of the mobile web – this means faster, better, easier and more user-friendly websites with high visibility on search engines as well as mobile devices – brief: better user experiences.

This is exactly why learning HTML5 and CSS3 is a must.

Bianca Gubalke Showcase 2011-2012

To be continued…

Trendwise with Semiomantics XO2012

Trendwise with Semiomantics XO2012

In a world of infinite choice, we all have our personal preferences when it comes to creating the Web Design for our personal websites and blogs – and this is exactly what many of our customers will tell us, especially if they have a business with set colors, fonts and logos. Of course, there are also those who haven’t thought about this issue, who may not want to be bothered with it (as this takes ample time and thought) and who expect us to suggest, advise and guide. This is where we should know and focus on current trends, put our personal priorities on the backseat, and design something fresh, modern and appealing where we are absolutely “Trendwise with Semiomantics XO2012″, which is currently going through a testing phase and will soon be released.

Trend Colors 2012 Image

Most importantly, we need to think forward to adapt to the incredible developments and momentum on the mobile web: can people see our web design work on their iphones, smart phones and tablets? This is currently the driving power behind many decisions and as we want our customers to get the traffic and results they expect, this is what we need to focus on and ensure that they too see the advantages of certain essentials they might not initially agree with.

It’s all about functionality and thinking customerwise: let them see what your website is all about fast and in an attractive way, make navigation clear, quick and easy like a dynamic show. And let there be balance!

 

Trendwise with Semiomantics XO2012

With the new trends 2012 having been set, how can we at Web Design South Africa be trendwise with Semiomantics XO2012, the best WordPress based script to be released soon, and give our website or blog a New Look 2012?

Trend Colors 2012 for Web Design with Passion

 

How to give your Author Blog a Trend 2012 Look

Here are a few pointers as to how to give your Author Blog a Trend 2012 Look:

1. Color Trend 2012

I already wrote about the Color Trend 2012 HERE.

To repeat it quickly, the color of the year 2012 is a warm orangy red called “Tangerine Tango”.  It’s not too far off the color I am always using in my personal color scheme that marks “Web Design with Passion”. However, there are other trendy colors like ‘solar power’ and the ‘sodalite blue’ I used in my example above, in connection with ‘tangerine tango’.

Here you want to think of backgrounds, fonts, menu, graphics, links, hover effects etc. – however, don’t overdo it when setting it off against another shade or complementary color. What I learned in Typography many years ago with one of Europe’s two leading authorities in the field and a true friend, Professor Tuenn Konerding (Staatliche Kunstakademie Duesseldorf, Germany), still applies today: experiment massively… but then reduce, keep it simple, don’t use more than 2… maximum 3 colors.

Professor for Typography, Essen, Germany

I wish I had a better photo – but I am happy I can call at least this one up – for an extraordinary mind and spirit that left our planet far too early…

Interesting also the trend towards one-page websites and a comeback of the magazine theme (full layout Semiomantics XO). Of course, Apple-style layouts are still en vogue as they are a modern classic and simply good.

 

2.  Typography 2012

The focus is on bold letters and custom fonts that can easily be read on mobile phones. Interesting here the Google Font Library that can be added in form of a plugin and loads fast while making the look of the website more appealing.

Textures, shades and reflections are ‘in’ as well…

 

 3. Large High Quality Images

Less text but large, high quality images – meaning all forms of sophisticated Media Design – be it photos, graphics, videos… – especially for backgrounds but also for graphics, sliders (we will come to these) and whatever you integrate into your Website Design to attract and captivate.The use of light or shadow boxes – where pictures can be enlarged in an overlay-  is very much in the trend.

Actually, we have been ahead of this trend with Semiomantics XO 2011 already, and particularly with our comprehensive work on Evolution, my personal favorite… yet unfortunately on Flash which is currently not seen on mobile phones due to power plays between the ‘big boyz’ … but this too shall change one day once even they get it that ‘competition’ is out and ‘cooperation’ is in to save our planet – and this is NOT a trend but a Truth! Ask Steve on Cloud!

Meanwhile Evolution will… well, evolve!

4. Sliders are en vogue

And yet another feature where Semiomantics has been well ahead of the trend: sliders are en vogue! Besides that, in my view they are brilliant, practical, interactive, attractive, seen on the mobile web and add to the functionality of a website. At tleast the ones we use – they do come at a cost, but it’s well worth it – quality always had its price!

5. Connect to Social Networks

Finally, websites and blogs need to offer easy ways – meant are rather ‘loud’ icons (… I leave this to your personal taste…) – to interlink and connect to Social Networks like Twitter, Facebook, Google + etc. Today, people look out where they can connect, follow, share and register … and so the cybernet expands continuously and I sometimes wonder what all of this really means at the end of the day and for our environment! But that’s a topic for another day!

For now… let’s be aware of current trends and advise customers accordingly… there’s lots to play with!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cape Town Christmas on Google

Cape Town Christmas on Google

Loyal to our regular monitoring of the SEO performance of our WordPress based Semiomantics websites and blogs – our own as well as those of our valued customers – , I am extremely pleased to see an excellent Google ranking of my article “Cape Town Christmas Gift Fair 2011″ right on the brand-new Monkey Valley Resort Website! The website was basically released today!

Cape Town Christmas Gift Fair 2011 on Google

 

Click on the screenshot to see it bigger…

 

Cape Town Christmas on Google

You will see that “Cape Town Gift Fair 2011″ ranks on positions 4, 5 and 6 on Google Top 10 – the place everybody interested in that keyword area is competing for… here on 2,300,000 search returns!

Save Money with a Semiomantics Website

How does this demonstrate how you can save money with a Semiomantics Website?

Well, the fight on the Internet highway is for a Google Top 10 position – either on the left side (see screenshot above), where there are 10 positions for super sexy websites and blogs that make it to the top – or on top (yellow area) and to the right where people spend continuously increasing daily budgets for Google Ads… simply to be visible when someone types this keyword string into the Google search engine.

Marketing with Google Adsense means being dependent short-term, medium-term and long-term as prices increase all the time… and to be efficient – meaning to get the traffic and visitors that might lead to eventual sales – one has to be visible 24/7/365… and that has its price. Don’t think you can get away with $50… there are keywords that cost more than that per single click. And this without any guarantees in terms of sales. Ever.

Whereas with a Semiomantics Website you invest once in a good Script, setup and Design… and you see top performance. Sure, you need to do your bit and publish regular good content… but that’s part of your online marketing anyway if you are selling anything – be it a product, a service or ad space – but at least here you can count on results…

So do your maths and contact us anytime when you are ready to do a Semiomantics online – on Google Top 10 that is!

 

 

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