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Inspiration Station: New Year’s Eve

September 25, 2014

 

vintage new years card

While you’re designing holiday cards, don’t forget New Year’s Eve! And also don’t forget to change the dates if you’ve got year specific cards in there. Here are some places to go to find inspiration for those Ringing in the New Year designs. Have fun!@

Pinterest logo vector - Free download vector logo of Pinterest

 

Holiday, Christmas and New Year Cards
A mixed bag, but certainly worth a look.

Vintage New Year’s Eve Cards
Retro is super hot, so get some ideas here.

New Year’s Eve
Another retro/vintage collection.

Holiday Card Templates
Mixed bag, but you’ll find lots to look at here.

New Year’s Day Cards
Interesting selection, some fresh ideas to inspire.

Design Spotlight: Rackafracka by Fritz

September 24, 2014

Our Design Spotlight falls today on artist Fritz at Rackafracka by Fritz, who joined GCU in August 2014. His cartoons really make us giggle and grin!

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My pen name is Fritz. I took this pen name when I moved to San Francisco California from Ames Iowa. Nobody knew me so I decided to change my name and sign my illustrations with the new name.  My Grandpa was also nicknamed Fritz and he loves to tell jokes. And since I’ve also love to tell jokes and make people laugh I thought it would be a good thing to carry on.  I’ve been drawing and reading cartoon as long as I can remember.

My heros are Gary Larson, Charles Schulz, and Bill Watterson. I started my first comic strip in high school with a character named Kumquat Boy. Most of the jokes were immature and involved farts and other bodily functions that at the time I thought were hilarious.

I moved to San Francisco and got my BFA in Illustration at the Academy of Art University. It was at AAU that I started my single frame comic strip called Rackafracka. I love the single frame comic. I love the challenge of telling a whole story in one frame. Single frame comics are versatile and flexible and are perfect for many applications. I also have the freedom to create new and funny characters every day.

One way I practice is in at a breakfast business networking group that I’m a part of that meets weekly. Every week there are three member speakers. Each speaker has seven minutes to talk. I challenge myself to come up with a joke and a illustration during that seven minutes and it has to be relevant to the topic they are talking about in their speech.

I pay the rent by doing custom cartoons for businesses that need custom illustrations for their marketing, websites, social media, and presentations. I’ve also done wall murals for companies that want to decorate their campus. My comic strip Rackafracka is a daily comic that will be re-launching on October 1, 2014.

I’ve always loved getting greeting cards for special occasions. Greeting cards are perfect for single panel comics like myself. I love the opportunity to think of comics for all the categories that are on GCU. It’s my challenge and my goal.

Rainbow Connection: Color Resource

September 23, 2014

The blog Ingrid’s Notes has posted a very helpful Thesaurus of Colors with examples of some very lovely colors and their names. So not only will you nave pure, beautiful colors to work with (I particularly like some of the yellows, a difficult color sometimes), you’ll be able to augment your Artist’s Notes with creative, color-based text. An example is below. Have fun!

trendy reds

 

Dash of Inspiration: Digital Watercolor Freebies

September 22, 2014

A Dash of Inspiration, A Cup of Creativity by Doreen

Digital Watercolor Freebies

I’ve always loved the watercolor medium. Whether it’s a light splash of color to create a lovely wash of hues; or rich, bold colors, this medium with it’s whites left uncolored technique has a recognizable artistic quality which stands out from all others.

For those of us who simply are not gifted with the talent to create traditional watercolor paintings, here are some fun goodies to use in your designs to create the illusion of watercolor. Those of you new to Photoshop or the digital art world, please refrain from plopping the ‘watercolor’ Photoshop filter on a photograph as a stand alone effect – this filter doesn’t even come close to resembling the watercolor medium, and will very likely appear as Excessive Effects causing your creation to be deemed unmarketable at GCU.

Watercolor Smudges – Vectors, Textures and Brushes

This resource includes 10 watercolor smudges and drips, each created by hand. The download includes vectors, brushes and the original jpg textures.

For those of you who love to layer textured backgrounds for mood and intensity, this set of backgrounds is a lovely addition to your texture collection.

25 Hi-Res Watercolor Textured Backgrounds by Daniel Davidson from Lost and Taken

Try digitally painting using digital watercolor brushes.

Free Hi-Res Watercolor Photoshop Brushes By Sandy

105 More Delicious Water Color Illustrator Brushes by Grant Friedman

There are two parts, so get both for a total of 211 Illustrator Brushes – mid-way down there will be a link to download the 2-part set of brushes.

I really love to paint in Corel Painter 11 and there are some wonderful brushes and tutorials for those of you who use this painting software. Such as this one:

Using Digital Watercolors (with Corel Painter & Wacom tablet) J. Solorzano

For those of you who would like to get serious about painting with digital watercolor in Photoshop, this tutorial set starts out with actions you can download to create realistic watercolor paper!

Watercolor Painting In Photoshop (including all tools, brushes, papers etc) Tutorials by Robert Ardill

His Tool Set Downloads

Each of these cards I’ve created using digital painting techniques in watercolors and oils.



So until next week … Learn … Create … Inspire!

Critique Clinic – September 20-21, 2014

September 20, 2014

How does it work? For three days a week (Friday-Sunday midnight), I will open the clinic to any artist who wants an honest peer review and critique of a card which gets plenty of clicks but no sales, so something’s probably not quite right, or you’ve got a new design you want to test drive, or you’re unsure about the marketability of a card. Or perhaps you’re a newbie who isn’t sure if a card is up to a marketable standard. Anyone is welcome to participate. In fact, I encourage everyone to at least look at the cards in question and read the critique comments – you may learn something. The purpose of the clinic is to help artists improve the commercial appeal and marketability of their cards.

THE RULES

  • ONE card per artist only.
  • Card must be intended for sale at Greeting Card Universe.
  • To submit a card for critique, post a link to the card at GCU in the comments section of this clinic post. Allowances will be made if you’ve had a card declined, or made a new design you’d like advice on before submission. Give us the link where we can see the card, such as your private gallery, Flickr, Tinypic, etc. If you do give a private gallery link, be sure your private module gallery is ON. Please do not post links to your Manage Cards section – do you really want strangers tinkering with your cards? And please don’t ask us to critique a card that’s pending review – we can’t see it until it’s approved.
  • Any artist is free to comment and/or give a critique of a submitted card. HOWEVER, post-and-run comments like “great card” or “you suck” will not be tolerated, nor will abuse. Criticism should be constructive, not destructive. Play nice or you will be banned.
  • I also won’t tolerate temper tantrums if you decide your “artistic integrity” is being stepped on because you asked for a critique, and someone told you the photo you’re using isn’t in focus. If you can’t take honest criticism, don’t submit. Once gets you a warning; twice and you’re banned from submitting in the future.
  • Artists who critique may do so by giving their opinion, posting an example of another card, or pointing the submitter to a video, on-line article, or other helpful suggestion.
  • Don’t forget that artists who are giving you tips and helpful advice are volunteering their time and trouble. Be nice. A link back to their store on your website or blog is appreciated (but not mandatory).
  • You are free not to take any advice offered. There’s no guarantee any card will be a bestseller, so don’t come into the clinic with unrealistic expectations.
  • Rules may change as we go along and we see how things turn out, okay?

So without any further ado, I declare this week’s Critique Clinic open!

Community Shout Out – GCU Down Time 9/23/2014

September 18, 2014

gcu news head

 

Greeting Card Universe will be down for scheduled maintenance on Tuesday, September 23, from 2:00 PM (Pacific Standard Time) until midnight (12:00 AM). Please don’t try to upload cards during this period.

If you need help figuring out the off-line period in your time zone, try this Time Zone Converter.

Thanks!

corrie signature

Rainbow Connection: Color Palettes Resource – COLOR Crush

September 17, 2014

Here’s a great resource for hot, happening, trendy, fabulous color palettes – Love Print Studio’s COLOR Crush has lots of pretty pictures and palettes for you to play with in your new designs. Below is an example of what you’ll find there. Have fun!

love print studio

Design Spotlight: Charlyn Woodruff

September 16, 2014

Our Design Spotlight falls today on artist Charlyn Woodruff of CW Designs, who joined GCU in 2912 and has been making us smile since with her sweet designs.

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Hello, my name is Charlyn Woodruff, my husband and I have 3 daughters (20, 19 and 10)  and  7 cats and live out in the countryside of WV where it takes 40 minutes to get to the grocery store!

Being that I am a stay at home mom and wife and a self taught artist in many different mediums, years ago  I started looking for ways to work from home to help my family financially. I began my adventure as a polymer clay artist when the sculptures I created were loved by family and friends and I thought others might enjoy them as well, so I started selling my creations on Ebay, Etsy and my own website. I had even added a few photograph designs of my creations to Zazzle. To my surprise others loved my creations as much as I did creating them and they became in high demand being one of a kind creations of which I would only create once, never to be recreated again.

I created my sculptures until the beginning of 2011 and due to the high demand and stress of having so many orders to create and ship and only one of me, and most of all my father passing away on Dec 31, 2010  my heart was shattered and broken and I could no longer and no longer wanted continue creating or anything else at that time and so I closed down all my stores and website except for my Zazzle store.

After my Dad passing away, my heart just wasn’t there anymore, he was my best friend and I was so very lost without him, it was like nothing mattered anymore and over that year I decided to dabble more into graphic design due to it wasn’t as stressful or time consuming as the polymer clay sculptures and the thought of working on them made me even more sad. So I slowly started adding designs to my Zazzle store, more as to help me work through the pain of losing my Dad than anything else. It kept my mind occupied to the point where I could tune everything else in life out at least just for a little while.

And over the past 4 years, I have branched out to other POD sites, such as Cafepress, Skreened, and started a card store on GreetingCardUniverse, created my own website Stylish-Business-Cards.com ( which is still a work in progress lol) and this past year my own original graphic artwork Charlyn Woodruff CW Designs  is also on Amazon.com. I enjoy having a wide range of art styles from cute to elegant to fractal art, it allows me to freely create what suits my mood for that day.

I know my Dad would be so very proud of me, he was and always will be my best friend and I am so grateful for POD companies and GreetingCardUniverse for not only giving artists a place to share their art with the world but it also helped me and is still helping me work through the most difficult time in my life when I lost my heart.

I picked this cute cat Christmas card that I created because Christmas was always mine and my Dad’s favorite time of year as we both loved decorating and just spending time with family and being that I am a cat lover and have 7 cats of my own, it is one of my favorite cards and makes me giggle when I see it! I know I don’t have many cards but  I am looking forward to adding more fun cards to my GCU store as well as my other stores, it has taken time but I will keep on going, that is what he would want me to do. I know he is always with me no matter where I go ❤

For me the best compliment for any artist or designer is for others to enjoy your artwork and designs as much as you do when you create it by sharing it with their  family and friends or displaying it in their home or office!

I hope you enjoy my artwork and designs and may you find something that makes you giggle or smile!

Dash of Inspiration: GCU Color Chart

September 15, 2014

A Dash of Inspiration, A Cup of Creativity by Doreen

GCU Color Chart

 

This week I wanted to give all of you the GCU Color Chart which I created and use to match my inside and custom text colors to the front of my card designs.

For those who can use a Photoshop Color Swatch file, you can download that at the link.

Image_1_FileTypeImage_9152014

For those of you who can not use the Photoshop Color Swatch file, just right click on the image below and save this image. Then open the jpg in your editing program and use your color picker to match colors.

Image_2_GCUColorChart_9152014

 

Hope you all find this useful and happy creating!

If you don’t know how to use Color Swatches in Photoshop, this tutorial will help:

So until next week … Learn … Create … Inspire!

Critique Clinic – September 12-14, 2014

September 12, 2014

How does it work? For three days a week (Friday-Sunday midnight), I will open the clinic to any artist who wants an honest peer review and critique of a card which gets plenty of clicks but no sales, so something’s probably not quite right, or you’ve got a new design you want to test drive, or you’re unsure about the marketability of a card. Or perhaps you’re a newbie who isn’t sure if a card is up to a marketable standard. Anyone is welcome to participate. In fact, I encourage everyone to at least look at the cards in question and read the critique comments – you may learn something. The purpose of the clinic is to help artists improve the commercial appeal and marketability of their cards.

THE RULES

  • ONE card per artist only.
  • Card must be intended for sale at Greeting Card Universe.
  • To submit a card for critique, post a link to the card at GCU in the comments section of this clinic post. Allowances will be made if you’ve had a card declined, or made a new design you’d like advice on before submission. Give us the link where we can see the card, such as your private gallery, Flickr, Tinypic, etc. If you do give a private gallery link, be sure your private module gallery is ON. Please do not post links to your Manage Cards section – do you really want strangers tinkering with your cards? And please don’t ask us to critique a card that’s pending review – we can’t see it until it’s approved.
  • Any artist is free to comment and/or give a critique of a submitted card. HOWEVER, post-and-run comments like “great card” or “you suck” will not be tolerated, nor will abuse. Criticism should be constructive, not destructive. Play nice or you will be banned.
  • I also won’t tolerate temper tantrums if you decide your “artistic integrity” is being stepped on because you asked for a critique, and someone told you the photo you’re using isn’t in focus. If you can’t take honest criticism, don’t submit. Once gets you a warning; twice and you’re banned from submitting in the future.
  • Artists who critique may do so by giving their opinion, posting an example of another card, or pointing the submitter to a video, on-line article, or other helpful suggestion.
  • Don’t forget that artists who are giving you tips and helpful advice are volunteering their time and trouble. Be nice. A link back to their store on your website or blog is appreciated (but not mandatory).
  • You are free not to take any advice offered. There’s no guarantee any card will be a bestseller, so don’t come into the clinic with unrealistic expectations.
  • Rules may change as we go along and we see how things turn out, okay?

So without any further ado, I declare this week’s Critique Clinic open!