New Ideas
I need to update my finished projects:
I've sewn a blouse. *I know!!*
I've sewn and made 5 purses.
I've knitted a scarf.
Oh! And I baked Naan.
This weekend, hopefully I will get round to it....
e-xperiments.com
Please update your bookmarks to http://e-xperiments.com
Big thanks to my friend Grace for suggesting the name! I was trying to incorporate the "Elena" & "Experiments" together and was thinking quite literally, really long addresses like elena-experiments.com or elenaexperiments.com. What will I do without friends like her?! A few other friends thought it is a much better (and shorter) address to remember too.
I still have sqpixels.net as a forwarder to this new domain so it'll still work.
Huge Thanks to everyone for visiting my food blog!
Silly Me
Anyway. In brief.
Been discovering new fun geek apps like Twitter and Joost.
Drooling over new soon to be upgraded versions of Adobe CS3 and the new Apple Final Cut Studio 2.
Also "upgrading" my professional skills and technically organised. Creating organised workflows for all to follow or get their ass kicked.
Still trying to create a better sidebar for the blog.
And wondering what unusual muffin I will bake for Muffin Monday (MM02).
Makeover Blues
So being the incredibly impulsive and Singaporeanly impatient person that I am, I bravely dove into the unknown world of CSS trying to figure out how to change the colour of links. I've been fiddling and adjusting CSS scripts - without really knowing what I was doing of course. I'm still working on it -
It really doesn't help that I am a designer by trade and such details irk the hell out of me. Things like font size, alignment, spacing, font colour, link colour, how it should be 2 pixles to the left or 4 pixels to the right, paragraphs in blogs should not be justified unless unusual circumstance. I am a nazi. Creative people usually are control freaks.
I have demands. I want 3 columns in my blog, I wish there are more people designing better themes for RapidWeaver, I want to have cool designed features like on delicious:days - the most beautiful and well designed blog I've seen.
I wish I could let it go. But I can't and won't rest until I really can't do anything about it. I obviously need to learn CSS scripting.
Cintiq Poseur

I am lucky
and spoilt - I work for a boss who LOVES buying the latest toys for
the office. About two months ago, I was given a 21"
Wacom
Cintiq21UX to "test and
evaluate" for a couple of days. Also that week, I got to work with
the well known and well admired Design Guru, Stefan
Sagmeister who was in
the house and he and his team were so very impressed - and envious
;).
The Cintiq
21UX combines a 21" LCD screen and a pressure sensitive tablet to
create a surface you can paint on directly using a Wacom pen. It's
a wonderful tool for drawing, painting and rotoscoping. Digital
drawing has long been a different world from the traditional pencil
and paper. The pencil and paper way is more intuitive and organic.
You turn your canvas around, adjust the angle, you feel the lead
press against the paper - a highly artistic process. Digital
drawing on the other hand is upright, emotionally boring and
un-ergonomic. I just completed a DI job and using
the Cintiq made it truly pixel perfect! Touching up, erasing,
stamping, and painting were literally at the tip of my pen. The
ExpressKeys on both sides of the panel are great in replacing
spacebar, shift, option controls - the side Touch Strips make
zooming in and out a breeze. There is a slight delay especially for
super large stills but it's nothing to moan too much about - if
you're RAM abundant it's not a problem.
However, I
don't use it much for my other work applications simply because of
the design of the interface. Menus drop from the top and using the
Cintiq is not practical because your hand is blocking everything.
For other apps I stick to my Intous3.
After my glowing and gushing promotion of this wonderful technology
he immediately went out and bought 2!
How cool am I? *Haha!*
Mac Blogger

I a mac user
and I only just started blogging.
A good blogging software in OSX was not easy to find - it was
either too limiting in layout and configuration, or it was too
complicated requiring me to use linux. Web based blogging was great
but I wanted to use my own domain - which they supported but
somehow it didn't work out. I tried iWeb, it had attractive
templates and it made creating a website incredibly easy - BUT when
it's published it gives you strange names for your urls and it
flattens everything including texts - which is not desirable
especially for a food blogger who shares her recipes. Makes copy
and paste impossible. Also, if you are not publishing on the .mac
website - less features are available. I was left
disappointed.
So finally after clicking on every possible link that turn up in my
google search of "Blog OSX", RapidWeaver by RealMac
Software turned up. It appears slightly complicated at first but
after a few trials it actually is uncomplicated to use. There are
also third-party template creators that provide other template
alternatives should you prefer something else beside the default
versions. It does
help to have
some HTML knowledge and basic ones are easy to learn and help is
easily found all over the internet. Just copy and paste.
I am grateful to RapidWeaver :)




