https://spark.adobe.com/sp/
Tuesday, March 20, 2018
Wednesday, March 14, 2018
Create a Jellyfish with Brushes in Adobe Illustrator
Create a Jellyfish with Brushes in Adobe Illustrator
https://design.tutsplus.com/tutorials/create-a-jellyfish-with-brushes-in-adobe-illustrator-cs5--vector-5184
Friday, March 9, 2018
Making photoshop watercolour brushes
Creating custom watercolor brushes is as easy as dripping ink or watercolor paint onto paper. You will have custom, ready-to-paint brushes in no time thanks to this simple tutorial. Download the attached watercolor scans and follow the steps below to create your own set of drippy, splashy, and splattered brushes.
1. Editing Scanned Images
Step 1
For starters, if you'd like to make your own watercolor or ink splashes to use in this tutorial, it's a simple process.
Grab thick watercolor paper or card stock, a soft paint brush, and a small watercolor set. Dribble, drop, splash, and smear watercolor or ink onto the paper. Wait for it to dry, and scan the paper into your computer.
If your paper is too large to fit your scanner bed, cut the paper down (as I did), since you want to make sure you can get the paper itself to be as white as possible, making your watercolor stand out.
If you'd rather use my watercolor images, download the Watercolor Scans zip file attached to this tutorial.
Open the file labeled Watercolor Scan 3 in Adobe Photoshop. Go to Image > Image Rotation > 90° Clockwise to rotate the file. Hit Auto Tone under Image.
Step 2
Use the Crop Tool (C) to isolate the paper on the left of the image. Grab the Lasso Tool (L) to select your chosen watercolor splatter, and Copy (Control-C) and Paste (Control-V) it into a New Document.
Step 3
Adjust the Levels (Control-L) so the right slider is moved a bit to the left (241) and the middle slider a bit to the right (0.74). You want the watercolor splatter to be darker and the background to be whiter.
Step 4
At this point my watercolor splatter is ready to become a custom brush.
2. Creating Custom Brushes
Step 1
Select your watercolor splash and under Edit hit Define Brush Preset. Give your new brush a name and hit OK.
Step 2
Use the Lasso Tool to select a smaller portion of the watercolor design, and define this as a brush too.
Step 3
Now, use the Brush Tool (B) to select your newly-made brushes in the Brush Presets panel and use them within a new document. Change the Foreground Color, Opacity, or Flow of the brush so each splatter looks different.
3. Using the Watercolor Brushes
Step 1
Using the other scanned pieces from the ZIP file attached to this tutorial, create other brushes from the watercolor splatter in each image. Layer instances of each brush onto each other either for more pigmented versions of the brush or to mix colors.
When used with a pressure-sensitive tablet, the brush creates a fantastic watercolor-style texture, depending on the settings used in the Brushes panel.
Step 2
Finally, a quick look at how two different shapes create different styles of brushes. The shape on the right creates a large, blocky splatter, which is great for covering large areas. Below the first image, you'll see the shape from the upper left, which is wispier than the first, and creates lighter streaks of color. It's just a tiny example of how each shape in the scanned images attached to this tutorial will change the look of your brushes as you paint with them.
Enjoy Your New Brushes!
Create a splatter background. Paint a digital watercolor piece. Create new textures from the brushes to be used in photo manipulations. The use of your new custom brushes is entirely up to you. Share your creations in the comment section below.
For more tutorials on creating custom Photoshop brushes, check out these links:
Wednesday, March 7, 2018
What Is The Golden Ratio? What You Need to Know and How To Use It
What Is The Golden Ratio? What You Need to Know and How To Use It
Monday, March 5, 2018
Documentary- The Story of Content: Rise of the New Marketing
Documentary- The Story of Content Marketing
The Best Content Marketing Examples
The Best Content Marketing Examples
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN CONTENT AND CONTENT MARKETING IS A DESTINATION YOU OWN!
Content marketing is not a piece of content. it is not marketing with content like brochures. It is not a native ad. It is not a “viral video.”
Content marketing means acting like a publisher, consistently creating content that our customers actually like to read and share. Content marketing is how build an audience and attract subscribers who opt-in to allow you into their already over-crowded email inbox.
This is very different from advertising. Advertising means occasionally interrupting the content your audience actually wants, in order to sell them a product or introduce your brand. Many of us opt-out of unwanted advertising. Advertising is not something we typically want to read and share. Advertising is how publishers monetize their traffic.
So look to great content marketing examples like L’Oreal’s Makeup.com, Adobe’s CMO.com and our favorite industry-wide content marketing example like American Express OPEN Forum. That site is the largest source of leads for their small business card division.
Imagine you are the content marketing director for your company and you led the creation and management of a program that drove more leads and sales than any other marketing activity. With results you can rack and measure in business terms.
It starts with an understanding that marketing is not about selling, but about the conversation we have with our customers. It continues with investing in content marketing, because the difference between just content and content marketing is the destination.
HOW TO BECOME A GREAT CONTENT MARKETING EXAMPLE FOR OTHERS?
Let me break it down:
- Define your content marketing mission and put someone in charge
- Publish content your audiences want
- Publish on a regular basis
- Publish content from a combination of named authors
- Cover a unique variety of topics that you have the authority to be an expert in
- Consider whether your content marketing will be more or less branded and “on domain” (the same as your company url) or off domain (a website you have to buy).
- Optimize your efforts on building subscribers
- Measure Content Marketing ROI based on your ability to reach, engage and convert new audiences for as little investment as possible
The best content marketing examples also combine utility with design. Headspace and Innocent in particular have created beautiful aesthetics which do not compromise on the information delivered.
It might seem like a lot of work to produce content hubs like these, but this is not necessarily the case. If you are a content marketer – if you are producing articles, videos, blog posts and other content on a regular basis – you are already most of the way there.
And check this out for more on what makes these content marketing examples great.
Now, take a look at the list, get inspired, and know that you can become one of the best content marketing examples.
THE BEST CONTENT MARKETING EXAMPLES
The entries on our list come from a range of different categories. We have major financial institutions brushing up against mindfulness and well-being apps, and globe-trotting airlines rubbing shoulders with search engine marketing blogs.
The message that this gives is clear. No matter what field you are in, no matter what sort of content your users are interested in, developing a content marketing program to tie it all together is the only way to go.
Think about what your users want to see, then think about how they want to see it. How are you going to deliver it to them? Which way is going to be the most effective?
I’m not picking winners here. For the purposes of this list, everyone is a winner. Instead, arranged in alphabetical order, are the best content marketing examples I have found. Get inspired and join my list next year!
Are you interested in building your own amazing content marketing experience? Contact me here and let’s talk about how we can help.
- Acorn’s Grow
- Adidas Group’s Blog offers “Personal insights into our business in sports.”
- Adidas’ GamePlanA provides stories for “creators, tackling work life with an athlete’s heart”
- Adobe
- Air B’n’B: The revolutionary accommodation solution provider have been lighting the way when it comes to content.
- Aloha
- American Express OPEN Forum: “Insights, Inspirations and Connections To Grow Your Business” -1 of the earliest and most-cited example of content marketing
- Anthropologie: As stylish as you’d expect from these guys
- AstraZeneca
- AT&T’s BusinessCircle
- Autodesk
- Bank of America BetterMoneyHabits
- Barney’s
- Bayer
- Ben & Jerry’s: The ice cream giant has been a master of brand identity for years now, and their web content shows the same commitment.
- Betterment’s Resource Center “Information to help you lead a smarter financial life”
- Birchbox Magazine and Men’s Guide
- Blackboard Blog
- Bloomberg Enterprise Blog
- Blue Apron
- Blue Cross Blue Shield of Alabama has this amazing YouBar that customizes your content experience
- Bobbi Brown’s Everything Bobbi
- British Airways: Connecting cities around the world with their travel hub services; doing the same for web users with their content hub.
- BufferApp Blog
- CA
- Canva: An unusual entry on our list, Canva is a digital design app. However, its website hosts a content hub with the sort of smart organization and stunning design we would all do well to emulate.
- CapGemini’s Content Loop (one of the best examples of how to convert visitors to leads)
- Casper’s Pillow Talk but they also created . . .
- Casper’s VanWinkles: “Exploring sleep with our eyes wide open” (one of my favorite content marketing examples)
- CDW
- Chase.com/News – Great example of a company incorporating content marketing right into their homepage
- Citi
- Cleveland Clinic Health Essentials is one of the best examples on this list
- Colgate Oral Care Center
- ConAgra’s Forkful.com
- Coke’s Coca-Cola Journey “Refreshing the world. One story at a time.”
- Ciena Insights
- Cisco Connected Futures Magazine I love the look and design of this site
- Cleveland Clinic
- Deluxe Small Business Revolution
- Denny’s
- Departures from American Express for their Platinum card members, run by Time Inc.
- Disney Blogs – the power of storytelling
- Domo’s BusinessIntelligence.com shows the power of owning the category domain
- Dollar Shave Club’s MEL
- Electronic Art’s EA News Blog
- Equinox: Equinox’s Furthermore balances subtle but sharp aesthetic touches with content variation across the whole lifestyle spectrum, showing others in this class how it is done.
- Etsy
- Farmer’s Insurance Inner Circle “The latest tips and insights on auto safety, home upkeep and planning for life’s special moments.”
- Fidelity MyMoney “Get in better financial shape today.”
- First Republic
- First Round
- Four Seasons
- Fresh Direct: The branding here is exquisite; as fresh and clean as you’d hope for from these guys. But, beneath the surface is genuine insight.
- GEICO
- General Mills Tablespoon “Food that’s fun” – offers a great visual exploration of recipes and food
- GE Reports
- GE Txchnologist
- Google’s Think With Google
- Glossier
- GoPro
- Grant Thornton
- Harry’s
- The Hartford SmallBizAhead
- Headspace: The team behind the fantastically popular meditation and well-being app deliver great content and insight via their CM hub, all with the same trademark branding we have come to expect.
- Home Depot DIY Blog
- Honestly
- HPE Matter
- HPE Community Blog
- HPE TechBeacon Great examples of a company building on-domain and off
- Hubspot Blog “Your Daily Dose of Inbound” segmented by Marketing, Sales and Agency personas
- Huckberry
- IBM: The computing giants are showing that they are not going to get left behind in the content marketplace.
- Innocent: Innocent by name, wily in the content game by nature. Innocent have been a runaway branding success story for several years. Their top notch content hub shows us how.
- Invision
- Intel IQ: Another computing giant, leveraging their vast stock of expertise and authority. Intel’s content hub is exactly as it should be; a fascinating resource of insight.
- Jack Daniel’s The Single Barrel Standard: Whiskey wisdom and Cocktail news? Sign me up!
- J.Crew
- Jet Blue
- Johnson & Johnson
- JP Morgan
- Kimpton Hotels
- Lego: With Lego, the emphasis has always been on fun, and this is very much evident within their content marketing strategies.
- Lenovo’s ThinkProgress, with content by Intel
- Lilly
- Lincoln Now
- LinkedIn’s Marketing Solutions Blog
- Rosetta Stone’s LinguaVore: “A blog about learning language.”
- Lululemon
- L’Oreal’s Makeup.com great example of a consumer brand “owning” the category
- LVMH
- MAC: No one is going to accuse MAC cosmetics of selecting style over substance. The market leader’s content hub provides a wide range of different articles and content formats to its visitors.
- Marketo Blog
- Marketo CMO Nation
- Marks & Spencers
- Marriott‘ Traveler: Love what these folks are doing across their portfolio
- Marriott’s Meetings Imagined
- Marriott’s Travel Brilliantly
- Mayo Clinic’s Sharing offers personal stories of real people overcoming disease
- Memorial Sloan Kettering: The Memorial Sloan Kettering cancer treatment and research center website features a content hub with a tone appropriate to the gravity of its subject matter. Providing support and assistance to patients and family members, the New York non-profit gets it right.
- Method’s Soap Dish
- Michael Kors: The luxury fashion marque keeps it diverse with different pieces of content for every user. Dipping in to look at photos and losing yourself in more in-depth pieces is possible here, as all needs are catered for.
- Microsoft’s Stories – another great example of a company bringing “Stories” to their homepage
- Mint Life Blog
- Momofuko
- Morgan Stanley
- Morning Star Farms
- Moz: As SEO and web content specialists, you’d expect their content hub to be exemplary. Committed fans of the Moz team will know this to be true.
- Nasty Gal’s Nasty Galaxy
- National Association of Realtor’s House Logic
- Net-A-Porter’s The Edit and Mr Porter
- Nationwide
- New Belgium Brewery Community Blog – because beer
- One Medical Blog: “You have one life. Make it count.”
- OpenView Venture Partners Blog “Insights for B2B software companies.”
- OpenView Venture Partners’ Labs – another early example of content marketing for a small business
- Oracle’s Modern Marketing Blog
- P&G Everyday is another site that has been around almost from the beginning of modern content marketing
- Patagonia: Durable outdoor wear needs a robust content strategy to go with it, and this is provided by the Patagonia team.
- Petsmart’s Parent Resource Center
- Prudential The Challenge Lab “Learn about the human behaviors that get in the way of planning your financial future.”
- Pfizer
- Progressive: Insurers Progressive have taken a few steps away from the somewhat irreverent branding, instead focusing on a range of incisive content topics aimed at giving customers the information they need.
- Random House: Publishers Random House are no stranger to the power of the written word, and their hub utilizes this strength to the full with a diverse array of content.
- Red Bull
- Reebok: Reebok understands what is meant by a solid content strategy and have been providing great pieces of content to an avid base of users for years. This year, they showed no sign of letting up.
- REI
- Ricoh Work Intelligently
- Rue La La
- Samsung’s Insights
- Samsung’s Tech Life
- Salesforce Blog
- Santander: As one of the biggest banks in the world, Santander has a great deal of authority. They use this authority with aplomb within their content hub.
- SAP Digitalist Magazine: This was the site I started while at SAP and so proud to see how the team there has evolved it.
- SAP Hybris‘ The Future of Commerce
- SAS Blog
- Sharethrough’s NativeAdvertising.com “All things Native”
- Shutterstock Blog
- Society of Grownups
- Soul Cycle
- Sprint’s Future of Business
- Starbucks: The ethos of Starbucks has always been a creative, hip, collaborative one, and this is exemplified with their 1912Pike blog. This is where the firm’s creative endeavors come together, spearheading the brand into 2017.
- Sun Life
- Sweet Green
- Target’s “Bull’s Eye View” merged in 2015 with Target’s Corporate News site
- Taco Bell: Taco Bell’s The Feed is a consistent great source of inspiration for a successful, playful content strategy.
- TD Ameritrade Tickertape “Pearls and insights for investors.”
- Tory Burch’s Tory Daily I like how this site humanizes the Tory brand
- Tracksmith
- Uber’s Newsroom
- US Government White House Blog
- United Airlines
- Urban Outfitters: The ‘style blog’ genre has gained huge popularity in recent years, and has helped to propel numerous small businesses to the big time. Urban Outfitters is not one of them – their content game has been strong for some time – but they continue to serve as an inspiration.
- USAA
- Virgin America’s Flyer Feed
- Visual Matters – Sponsored by SAP
- Warby Parker
- West Elm’s Front + Main
- Wistia Video Library “Succeed With Video Marketing”
- WestElm
- WestJet Magazine
- Whole Foods
- Williams-Sonoma Taste: (still) a beautifully designed site
- WorldVision Blog “Building a better world for children.”
- Your Primer
- Zillow Porchlight: “Always on. Guiding you home.” This site is so popular, they are selling ads
- Zuora: Zuora’s great-looking Academy focuses on delivering genuine insight, support and development to the software producer’s customers.
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