Friday, 13 November 2009

About my new shop's products

I thought I'd better explain why I've gone for a Zazzle shop and the difference between the products there and those on my website.

In a nutshell, if you don't want hand-processed, signed prints then they are much more affordable via Zazzle.

I don't make that many sales via my website—hand-processed limited edition prints of my artwork are relatively expensive (especially in today's economic climate) and are beyond the reach of most of my followers. However, I know that most really like my work, judging by the comments left and if you're one of them, it's now much more affordable to buy...

Products on my Website are...

  • Hand printed on the finest quality paper
  • Hand mounted using archival quality material
  • Signed, dated and titled by hand
  • Available as limited edition prints as standard
  • For framed options I use a local professional framing service

Products in my Zazzle shop are...

  • Much more varied, with mugs, t-shirts (to come), cards and more
  • Printed on demand using a high quality process
  • Customisable
  • Much cheaper than the hand-processed prints on my website
See for yourself. In the panel below you can see my current range of cards and notelets (or if you choose, you can see all products).

With the Christmas holidays approaching, tell someone you care by sending them one of my fine art prints. What are the chances they'll ever get such a unique card from someone else?

make custom gifts at Zazzle

comments / feedback always welcome :)

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My shiny new Zazzle store

I've been searching for a while for a print-on-demand shop and now I've found one.

Zazzle.co.uk

Shops at zazzle are free to run—no setup or placement fees. Immediate appeal to a Scotsman! So I've spent the last couple of days setting mine up and I'm pleased to announce it's now open for business.


What's really cool is the level of customisation you can do to your products. You can even set some items, such as a card's inside message, as a template item. You provide the initial message but a customer can change or personalise it.

On top of that you can earn commission when folks follow your link and buy from other people's shops. Not bad.

The only drawback I found was initially getting used to the way you do things there, especially with the way you create products. But once you're used to it, it's really quite easy.

I know there's quite a few cat fanciers that follow my blog, so how about this:
Nedda postcard
Nedda by cunningba
Create Full colour postcards online at zazzle

comments / critique / feedback always welcome :)

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Thursday, 5 November 2009

Printing, framing, prize winners and new gadgets

A busy few days... nice busy :)

Gallery prep

The frames arrived today so it's been a good few hours of printing, mounting and framing—mostly framing as I'd already printed and mounted most of them. Even so I'm glad that's done and now it's just a case of delivering them to the Gallery Guest House in the morning.

£5 of each sale will go to the Poppy Appeal, which is very appropriate as the owners are ex-service folks.

October prize winners

Two of the prize winners from my October draw have been in touch, just waiting on the last one now. Where are you, Betty Manousos?

Slew of new gadgets

The Gooogle Friend Connect team have been busy! They've released some cool new gadgets, have introduced a way of making newsletters available and have made wholesale changes to the way you interact with the member / follower gadgets.I'm sure most of you will already have noticed some of these.

It'll take me a few days to get my head around them all before I work out which are most useful for my site and blog. Watch this space!

comments / feedback always welcome :)

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Sunday, 1 November 2009

Making the draw and other bits 'n bobs

So, a big day today—the day you've all been waiting for...

October giveaway...

So a little later I'll be drawing the winner from the Hat Of Wonder And Hope. Come back this evening (uk time) to see if you won. Good luck to all who took part!

Gadgets...

I also spent a little time this morning maintaining my blog, updating the template. Nothing huge—I added the top 10 Member Visits gadget, replacing the Member Links gadget. The links one had to go, as it didn't respect the blocked members and allowed anyone to leave spam links.

On a similar note, I had to block one member who was a bit zealous (i.e. spam-and-run) in leaving proselytising statements about his brand of Christianity. I don't have a problem with the various forms of religion, it's just forcing them down folks' throats that I find off-putting.

Similarly I've blocked another couple of followers with no interest in my blog but who were just spam-following (i.e. hoping folks will click their heads and then click the link to their dubious / mucky / commercial sites).

A social week...

I've had good friends staying as house guests this week while they were visiting their eldest son who has just started at Plymouth University.

Their young daughter had great fun seeing and playing with him again. Of course she misses him a lot, even though she skypes him almost every night from back home.

On Friday they all went to the circus in Ivybridge and had a great time and on Saturday we went to Mansour's for them all to try their hands at throwing pots. Everyone got messy with clay and had huge amounts of fun.

The rest of Saturday was spent getting my house back in order after their visit. It's a real joy to have the house filled with gurgling laughter and the to-ing and fro-ing of growing kids, relived as you go around tidying up after they've left.

..And now I can get back to catching up on all your blogs, which will be nice!


comments / feedback always welcome :)

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Monday, 19 October 2009

Plymouth Respect Festival 2009

Celebrating cultural diversity and bringing communities together

A local event

Once again my good friends Dan and Katie Thompson have organised the Plymouth Respect Festival, starting this coming weekend, Sat 24th October, 11:00am at the Civic Centre Piazza and finishing on Sunday around 4:30pm

As luck would have it their normal website is down so you can find all the details of what's happening, where and when on their myspace page: Respect Festival [Update: 20th October] The proper Respect Festival site is up and running again.

I'll be there on and off with my camera, if you see me, say "hi"!

comments / critique / feedback always welcome :)

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Char needs...

two more followers...

Back to two hundred...

Char over at Ramblins was delighted to reach 200 followers—but then a couple left. She's a lovely lady with a great eye for composition and a gorgeous and appealing style to the photos she takes.. ...and her writing is from the heart.

So get on over there and follow her! Let's see if we can get her up to 225 followers, as she deserves a boost :D

..and I'm back from Rambunctious

...where Lee loved the projected vid (see my last post) and has asked if he can use it over the next few weeks. (Yes, of course the answer was "yes"!)

Unfortunately there weren't that many folk there—actually anywhere—I don't know why but everywhere I passed tonight was dead. Plymouth is much more of a university city than it ever was but you wouldn't have thought it!

So anyone from Plymouth—let's meet up at Rambunctious next Sunday evening (around 10:00pm).

comments / feedback always welcome :)

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Sunday, 18 October 2009

Off to rambunctious...

Lee, who helps / organises this night of poetry, comedy, video art and general frivolity, has been after showing something of mine for a while now.

Showing The New Consonance / Urban Ugly

I burnt a dvd of the vid of my photo essay that Gordon Charlton (Beat Frequency) put together (leaving out the menu, you'll be glad to hear, Gordon, Valerie, Imac and Melania!) and Lee will be showing it tonight at rambunctious social club.

So I'm just posting this before setting off with some give-away dvds and flyers. Wish me luck for a great reception down there :)

comments / feedback always welcome :)

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Friday, 16 October 2009

Getting ready for display at Gallery Guest House

an evening of...

Printing, signing and mounting

Over at the Gallery Guest House, Karen has been putting together a list of my pictures she wants for display there. I got her email a couple of days ago and its now got to the top of the "attention" pile ;)

So it's been an evening of printing, spraying, cutting & sticking, preparing the first batch—five down, fifteen to go! Actually, twenty may end up being too big for the space, so I intend to take the first batch along, before framing, just to check it all out.

[Note to self: Must get on the phone first thing and order up some more 16x12in mounts!]

A question for my regulars: I've always used glass in my frames and now I'm wondering about the plastic / acrylic glass I see used as standard on some of the online framing sites. They say it's 100% uv-protective. What do folks think about it?

comments / critique / feedback always welcome :)

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Thursday, 15 October 2009

If things go wrong in threes...

..then why were there four on Tueday? Uh-oh... does that mean there's two more to come? Ulp!

Duchy Square Centre & Gallery

I took the triptych and a huge canvas of Fencing In The Dunes as the owner had said she wanted to see it. Before going in, I gave the pony triptych a quick flick down and noticed a small fleck next to one of the pony muzzles. Darn, it was under the glass not on top. So I stressed briefly about it (I'm a virgoan, so it's always a bit of a battle trying not to be a perfectionist!) before ignoring it and taking it in.

I pointed it out to Philippa and we were about to decide to go with it, when we spotted a small piece of bluetac under the glass. Ok, that was the decider—and in a way I was relieved.

So, on with the canvas. Philippa loved it right away and we filled out the paperwork for it on the spot. Embarrassment number two (and a lesson for us all - check everything before taking to the gallery for hanging!): she called me back and pointed out some dark markings on the white canvas border.

It was pristine when I hung it at Park Art and it's been in bubble-wrap ever since. How those marks got there, I can't figure. One of the other artists in the centre (thanks Amanda, lovely lady!) dug out some putty-eraser and we tried that but to no avail.



Later, when I got it back to base, I found that a damp white cloth gently applied, cleaned off whatever it was on the canvas border. There's a tip I'll never forget!

So, that's two of the four things that went wrong.

I won my own prize

..or that's the way it seemed! A prize from my September draw that I posted to Melania a few days ago was delivered back to me.

I'm a canny Scotsman (we have a reputation for being "careful" with money) and this combines well with being green... so I re-use packing material when I can. On the back of the parcel was my delivery address, all printed and barcoded - with a big cross through the lot before I posted it. On the front was the right address, postage stamp, customs declaration etc.

I guess a post-office scanning machine was still able to read the barcode on my crossed out address, so promptly had it delivered to me! So, lesson two learned: obliterate any barcodes from previous address labels still showing on the parcel). Anyway, it's re-posted now (sorry Melania!)

And number four

I've sorted out burning DVDs with the youtube video that my friend Gordon put together. I've even worked out how to avoid creating the dreadful DVD menu that I put on the first few DVDs.

So I spent ages designing some graphics for a label for the DVD and then getting it to align with the cutouts on the DVD labels for my inkjet.

So I burnt the first couple of DVDs, checked they were ok and then cracked on with the rest (18), printing and sticking the labels onto the DVDs. OK, so I'm new to the DVD burning s/w and didn't realise I'd changed a setting after the first two. When the last one was done, I popped it back in to check, just for belt and braces. I'm glad I did!

The last 18 were all weird files and not actual DVD videos. Aaaaaargh! and I'd used up all the labels—double aaaaargh!!

Still, looking at the positive, at least two were ok!

On a brighter note

...I went to an evening event in aid of breast cancer at Martin Bush's Studio Gallery in Royal William Yard. I was really pleased to again meet Eliot Siegel, a well-known photographer, who had donated his time to taking portraits of anyone willing to hand over some readies for the charity. I seem to remember offering to be his gofer in return for some tips on lighting! Two glasses of pink (sorry, rosé) wine and I'm anyone's!

A delightful young lady (doing a degree at Plymouth College of Art) and her boyfriend were helping Eliot and she said she loved my work and did I need any assistance? I was flattered and gave her my card. Let's see if that turns into something concrete.

There was a fair amount of interest in my work amongst the guests and I answered questions and had some interesting discussions with a number of them. "Thank you, ladies (and gents!) for stopping by and chatting."

One lady had her first posting as a new WPC at the Court House when it was a police station and she gave me an idea of where things like the scenes of crime room etc were, also how they used a very early version of video conferencing for their area updates, before the term was coined. See, we're ground-breakers in using new technology here in relaxed Devon.



And for my part, I donated Caught By The Surf for the raffle and one delighted winner and husband went home over the moon.






comments / critique / feedback always welcome :)

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Thursday, 8 October 2009

Using your blog as an online shop

Hand-holding a blog virgin

Regular readers will know I've been spending a good chunk of time recently helping a just-computer-literate friend with his blog.

He wanted to test the waters out at selling his stuff on line. As we were pretty much starting with a clean sheet, we've been able to bend the blog to make it serve as the online shop (using paypal as the payment processor), as well as being a normal blog.

(Once he makes a few more ordinary postings - i.e. ones not selling a pot - we'll use the label "journal" on them to separate them out. Oh, and provide a link for that label in the navigation area at the top.)

As well as helping him with the blog, I've done all his product shots for it. You can see all those uploaded so far over on Mans' blog under the for sale label.

Advantages of a blog as an online shop

The main advantages of having your blog as your online shop are
  • No listing / placement fees!
  • You don't have to worry about being lost amongst the listings from your competitors
  • You only pay (in this case Paypal's) transaction fees
  • You have full control over
    • any ads placed (and of course you get the revenue from them, too!)
    • all links where you're making your pitch (and you can make sure external links open in a new tab so folks don't leave your site completely)
    • Easier to establish your brand
  • A much more personal interaction with buyers
  • Not at the mercy of changing shop rules like you get with ebay and others
  • Black-hat competitors can't ruin your seller-rating - again like can happen at most dedicated shopping sites
  • If you want to socialise your site even more, you can (Friend Connect / JS-Kit and others)

Disadvantages

The main disadvantages of using your blog as an online shop are few but still need to be considered
  • It's not completely automatic; if someone buys a pot, Mans has to update the labels against the posting for that item, to show it is now sold. He can also change the text and the button to allow someone to place a special order for one similar to the one shown.
  • People go to dedicated shopping sites in a buying frame of mind, but not really with a blog
  • You have to have a way of taking on-line payments, dedicated online shops will do that for you
  • No dedicated rating system of you as a seller or others as buyers - being a blog, people can leave comments, so it's the second one that might be of more concern
  • A much more personal interaction with buyers
Did I miss anything major out do you think? Let me know in the comments if I did, or if you want to add anything else...

Requirements-driven shop design

So how did we set about it? Well, my trade is helping people focus on what they need before worrying about how to achieve it. Also, KISS—keep it simple, stupid!

So we sat down and brainstormed for a while, teasing out stuff to come up with a list of main requirements. Examples: be able to take online payment, be able to see only products for sale, only those sold, same for all the major categories. Another: Easy to maintain and add new items for sale & be able to withdraw items from sale.

..and so on.

Designing a solution to the requirements

We acknowledged that various dedicated online shops could be used but their disadvantages were too great for what Mans wanted. Then we considered how / if Blogger could be used, noting any requirements that couldn't be met and hoping we wouldn't bump into any show-stoppers—we didn't :)

The key to being able to list items in different ways is to use labels carefully and in a sort of structured way. We spent ages deciding how to categorise and name each major type of ceramic / glaze / treatment, and being totally consistent in our approach. We finally settled on a scheme that worked and this also gave us a way of naming each pot and giving it a stock code.

And having a name for each, naturally gave us the title for each post (i.e. each new item for sale). Also, because we've been as descriptive as possible in our choice of titles / names / categories / labels, the blog will score highly with the search engines for those keywords (a good SEO tip).

Another tip here; before we uploaded each product shot, we named the jpg file using the same naming convention as above, reinforcing the tastiness to the search engine spiders. As an aside, note that the first time you publish a particular post, the post page will use a filename consisting of a good part of the post heading you used. So, for SEO purposes, make sure your title is both meaningful and helpful to your readers AND keyword-rich for the spiders, before you first post it.

Anyway, on with the solution design...

For simplicity, we decided to put a unique number on the end of each item, so no matter what type of ceramic was being posted as a new item for sale, the last number used would have one added to it and that would be the new number. Nice and simple :) And you can't forget, if you do, you just need to look at the blog!

One requirement that couldn't be met by Blogger (at least not with my skills!) was that Mans wanted visitors to be able to put together a wish list—like on Amazon and others. He told me that this wasn't a show stopper—-anyway, there might be a solution out there (but where do we look?). It would also have been nice to be able to automatically change the label on an item from "for sale" to "sold" when a transaction completes but Mans is ok about doing that by hand.

Everything else he needed his shop to do has now been set up on his blog. If you want proof, go browse for something you like and buy it! Maybe a Copper Matt Raku thrown pot—my personal favourites, although the Lustre Raku stretch pots are fabulous too!

Putting it into practice

To make it easy to add new items for sale, we cobbled together the first posting for an item for sale, including the code for the paypal button, with me doing any tricky html stuff (tricky for me, anyway!). Once we'd got that right, we copied the html and pasted it into his blog settings - the place where you can put a mini template / boiler-plate text to be used on subsequent posts.

The only thing Mans now needs to get his hands dirty with is changing the part of the button html code where it needs a unique item code, a price and a description. I sat with him the first few times he did this to make sure he knew what to do—and more importantly what not to do—and even more importantly, how to back out any changes if he did!!



Well, that's about it, it wasn't supposed to turn into such a long and detailed posting, but you know how it goes when the ideas just flow!

So I gotta ask, are you thinking now about using your blog as an online shop?

comments / feedback always welcome :)

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Saturday, 3 October 2009

Some blogs of interest to photographers and...

Well, not just photographers :)

Useful / interesting...

The Galloping Gardener
...visits English gardens and those further afield. As a place to go just to enjoy and relax, you can't beat an English garden. But if you take your camera, you can practice close-ups, macros, pretty scenes and more. One good thing, the flowers and plants tend to be very well kept and the photo opportunities aren't so often spoiled by things past their best.

Quite often they are pretty good at labeling the plants so you know what it is you're photographing. If you see them on your visit, snap the name after you've finished your shots - it's a handy way of making sure you don't forget what they're called.

The History and Language of Flowers
Have you ever wondered what you're saying when you buy a bunch of flowers from the garage for your loved one? This handy site tells you the almost-lost meanings of each flower. Now when you hear the phrase "say it with flowers" it actually means what it says!

So next time you buy flowers, you'll be able to compose you're own message. Never mind tweets, txts or emails, do it the old-fashioned romantic way :)

The Royal Photographic Society
If you're serious about photography you'll want seriously to consider joining. There are hurdles to jump to get entry but that keeps the quality high (I haven't applied yet, but it's on the list!). Open to UK and overseas membership.

Converting colour to black and white
A really good article to give you a grounding in converting black and white to colour. It has hover-over effects so you can see how, for example, red, green and blue filters affect a colour image. It also discusses the basics of using Photoshop in different ways to carry out your conversions.

How to Create a Product Box in Photoshop
A cool little tutorial.


comments / feedback always welcome :)

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Thursday, 1 October 2009

Product Shots - pottery blog

As I said in my last post, I'd post details about what I've been working on and let you see the results of the product shots.

Mansour Eskandary

Mansour—Mans for short—is a well known potter, based just outside of Plymouth. He's had a blog for a while but was waiting until he could offer his work for sale there before developing it.

I've been helping him with that, working out a scheme to use the blog for that purpose, as well as the more normal uses. I've also been doing the product shots, as I spoke about in my last post.

Have a look at his blog, there's only two products for sale so far. But now that we've broken the back of the approach, it shouldn't take long to upload the product shots and do the blurb for the rest of this batch of 24.

By the way, the "scheme" I'm on about is the way we've decided to use labels very carefully so that we could use a simple list of links at the top to allow visitors to quickly see, for example, all the sold work, or all the raku, etc. We also spent a lot of time coming up with a convention to name each product.

I think we need one more column of links to cover
  • normal posts (all will be labelled "journal" or something like it)
  • terms and conditions
  • the privacy policy
Did I leave any out? Anyway, what did you think of the product shots?



comments / feedback always welcome :)

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Tuesday, 29 September 2009

Busy, busy, busy...

The madness continues, it seems there's not been a breathing space for ages. I've managed to visit and comment against a few of the blogs I follow but I've not been able to be as active doing that as I'd have liked.

Product photography

I've been spending quite a bit of time learning how to do product photography in the last two weeks—I'm helping a friend with turning his blog into a way to sell his work, and getting decent product shots was the first step.

It's been an interesting journey and a steep learning curve. What I've learned is that, with my level of knowledge (low!), not having the right kit makes it a bit of a trial and error process. And even once it works, making it repeatable I found to be no mean feat.

Because of my poor control over lighting / lack of experience to get it right in-camera, I shot in RAW throughout. That meant I could change the exposure and white balance in the digital darkroom and 'rescue' what otherwise could have ended up in that bit-bucket in the sky.

All the shots are now taken and we're working on the blog template. Once it's ready, I'll put a post together with links to it.

Duchy Square Gallery

I drove to the gallery in Princetown (map) for a meeting with the lovely Philippa on Monday. Great result, she took 4 prints for immediate display and ordered a pony triptych, ready for the exhibition starting in November.

September draw update

There are 9 successful entries so far. If  you're not one of them and you want in, please see the rules. Closing date is midnight, 30th September, UK time. The successful entrants so far are:

With three prizes the odds of one of these winning are high... if you like these odds, make sure you enter. But you'd better hurry up!

comments / feedback always welcome :)

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Saturday, 26 September 2009

Gallery and Google news

another eventful couple of days...

Gallery news

I'm really pleased with myself today....

Exhibition confirmed

I went to a coffee morning in aid of the Macmillan Cancer Support charity at the Gallery Guest House and while I was there,  Karen confirmed they'll be hanging work from me in November (map).

And a new Gallery!

Also, after visiting a couple of places, I dropped into the Art And Soul Gallery, Stoke Village, Plymouth (map) with my just-framed Pony Triptych and Bev was pleased to agree to hang it there and then.

Google Friend Connect want my site as an example

I got an email out of the blue yesterday from the Google product manager for Friend Connect. He'd seen my main site and was impressed both by the way I've integrated their social gadgets and the level of visitor interaction with them. He asked me for permission to use my site as an example, to use my profile photo and also for a quote about Friend Connect.

So a big Thank You to all my followers / members of my site for helping make this happen!

comments / feedback always welcome :)

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Thursday, 24 September 2009

Making progress...

It's been a busy few days... nice busy :)

September draw update


So that's 8 successful entries—and with three prizes you folks stand a great chance of winning!

If you think your name should be here, see the rules for how to enter.

Pony Triptych

I collected the framed "Grazing by Light" triptych yesterday. It looks absolutely stunning and all credit to Graham at Armada Framing for doing such a great job. Plan for the next few days is to visit some galleries and see if they want it. If they don't, their loss!

Radio interview

The chat with Sparksy at BBC Radio Devon on Tuesday morning went really well—I've had quite a few folks saying that they caught it and how well I came across. Just got to work out how to get on the telly now :)

comments / feedback always welcome :)

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Thursday, 17 September 2009

Intimate Glimpses photo essay set to theremin music

My good friend and thereminist Gordon Charlton has set my latest photo essay to music.

A small-size taster


A full HD version is available if you click through the video to youtube. Thanks Gordon :) (Gordon on facebook)



comments / critique / feedback always welcome :)

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Friday, 11 September 2009

Gordon Brown apologises on behalf of nation to Alan Turing

About time too....

A Downing Street Petition comes to fruition

Alan Turing, a genius mathematician who helped bring World War II to an earlier conclusion than would otherwise have been the case, was treated disgracefully just because he was gay and this led to his early suicide.

Gordon Brown has now offered a posthumous apology on behalf of the nation for the homophobic treatment he received. Full story...

comments / critique / feedback always welcome :)

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Thursday, 3 September 2009

Pony Triptych final layout

After a lot of trying different combinations I've finally settled on the one.

Vertical emphasis

Grazing With Light

I chose the vertical format for the triptych, as first suggested by Kitty (who, by coincidence, was also one of the three prize winners for August). The nature of each shot is vertical, both by orientation and composition. When the triptych is laid out vertically, it takes on a very commanding presence, as I'm sure you'll agree.

I've chosen a balanced sequence that goes for a top-to-bottom flow and a title which is both observational and describes the sculpting approach I used—a pun always helps :) 

I've managed to avoid the question of naming the individual images while I've been concentrating on the triptych and sorting out the August prize draw but I'll need to return to that next. But first I have to work out and post some new rules for the September draw, ones which mean I don't lose a whole day actually making the draw, like I did this time!

comments / critique / feedback always welcome :)

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Wednesday, 19 August 2009

Blog maintenance - SEO stuff

A diversion from photography for some blog maintenance ...and whew, am I glad that's over!

I'm slightly technical—just enough to be dangerous—and have long been trying to make something happen in my classic template that is a piece of cake in the layouts types of templates.

Wobbly knees?

If your knees wobble at the mention of html, then this is not for you—nor if you use layouts templates (where you get to click and drag page elements around). If this is you, please go and do something more interesting—maybe have a look at my main site instead :)

Still here? Hokay, it's like this. I wanted to make sure that the 'titles' of the pages (the names that appear in you browser's tabs or in the browser's windows title bar) were 'friendly' to search engines.

Trivial? No...

What I'm talking about might seem fairly trivial but is one of those things that helps propel your blog to the top of the pile in search engine results. Well, maybe not so much a propelling, more of a bubbling up.

Before I started messing, every single page used my blog's name in the titles, as generated by the template.

Instead, I wanted my posts' titles (this post's title is 'Blog maintenance - SEO stuff') to be used on the post pages (the one you get to when you click a post's title). I know this will improve things from the search engines' points of view.

Now the greedy little search engine spiders, when feeding on the title meta tags on my pages, will get to dine on what I'm posting about (the post's title) rather than the same old, same old of my blog's name.

Template change

In my blog template (remember, this is a classic template) right at the very top, where it used to have:
  • <head>
  • <title><$BlogPageTitle$></title>
I changed it to:
  • <head>
  • <MainPage><title>Musings in Monochrome - the art of bw photography</title></MainPage>
  • <ArchivePage><title><$BlogPageTitle$></title></ArchivePage>
  • <itempage><title><blogger><$BlogItemTitle$></title></blogger></itempage>
NB The tags in the last bullet look strange, with </title></blogger> seeming to be the wrong way round—but trust me, they're not. But I don't know why!

What is the effect?

Look at the title displayed by your browser in its title bar (or on the tab that this page is displaying in).
  • If you're viewing my main page, the title will be 'Musings in Monochrome - the art of bw photography'.
  • However if you're viewing it on its own post page it will have the title 'Blog maintenance - SEO stuff'.
  • Finally, if you're viewing it in the archive the page will have the title 'Musings In Monochrome: August 2009'
    NB The words "Musings In Monochrome" in this last example comes from my blog setup (blogger dashboard->settings->Basic->Title).
So that's 180 post pages that will now benefit. Surely that's got to result in more people finding me/my blog in searches? I use Google Analytics, so I'll be able to keep an eye on whether it does.

Anyway, I just thought I'd share :)

comments / critique / feedback always welcome :)

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Tuesday, 11 August 2009

Photographers Bust Card (UK only)

With the anti-terrorism laws in the uk, innocent photographers have been 'harassed' by the police using poorly interpreted law. The MET (Metropolitan Police) have been tardy but have provided clarification that common practice exercised by police officers with regard to photographers has largely been wrong.

I'm a photographer not a terrorist

This is a summary of your rights and the police's powers.
Download and print your 'bust card' here

comments / critique / feedback always welcome :)

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Friday, 7 August 2009

Listening to you

A few people have suggested that I use bigger images—you might have noticed that the most recent pictures on my blog have been uploaded using the "large" blogger setting.

And, as a natural progression, I've increased the size of the images in my galleries as well, this time by close to 50%.

So thanks everyone for leaving feedback, it doesn't fall on deaf ears!

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Friday, 31 July 2009

Clarity given by MET for UK journalists (blogger, that's you!)

The MET have re-issued their guidance about interfering with "journalists" and their cameras.

Hope for all UK bloggers

Many have cried "that's ok for journalists but what about the rest of us?"

I believe that this is great news for many more than National Union of Journalists (NUJ) journalists.

I blog therefore I am (a journalist)

Because of this blog I class myself as a journalist. The guidance given by the MET doesn't include a definition of what a journalist is, and I see no reason why the widely accepted notion that many bloggers are journalists should not apply.

To make it clear, I intend to design, print and laminate a journalists badge to wear when the occasion demands. For me, that is any time when I'm out and about with my camera. I am, after all, a photojournalist by the mere fact of being a blogger who posts photos.

My purpose may be to record places or sights for historic record purposes, architectural interest or as a photo essay with an art bent. These and many other purposes are, to me, journalistic endeavours, making me or any exponent, a journalist.

Do you see any flaw in that?

comment / discussion welcome

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Thursday, 16 July 2009

Housekeeping...

I've just spent ages rationalising all my post labels. Not perfect but they'll do.

Whew!

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Saturday, 14 June 2008

Gallery update

I managed a new gallery update... all marked as "New!" (some other v. recent ones still marked as new). Yaay :)

Other things than have been happening

I've still to hear if I'm selected from the shortlist for a piece on one of the major terrestrial channels based around my Urban Ugly photo essay. I'll phone later today to see about any movement.

I hit my second major milestone on my new contract - the issue for review of the "logical business model - as is" by the contributors. It'll go out for formal review next Tuesday. The contract work has been spilling over into my evenings and weekends but hopefully the need for that is over.

Parasol Tops won second prize in the Implied Lines, Spring 2008 comp. in my club - The Studio Online. That makes 1 first and 3 seconds out of four competitions... Yaay!

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