Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Figuring Suffusion out - Image Slider

This is an odd post to write on blogger as it's about a theme for another blogging platform, but I needed a place where I could come back and check how things are done.

After I decided to self-host, I had no option but to go with a free theme, as I couldn't (still can't) afford a paid one.
I wanted a magazine template with an image slider, so I searched for those and tried a few ones that looked promising.

In the end I settled with Suffusion as it was the most flexible one I found, but also was one of the easier ones to set up.
That being said, there is a learning curve with Suffusion and to me the biggest problem is remembering what I did way back when, as I don't change the layout that much.

Setting up the slider:

Go to appearance, Suffusion options, other graphical elements and choose Featured Content.  Once there you can choose how many images (or posts, or pages) you want to display and where you want them to show (as in: front page, every page etc..).

Now, for some reason I chose to feature pages, which lead to other problems (when I was setting the magazine template).

First you are going to decide where the slider will appear, scroll down to Where to Show and choose what works best for you.  I chose to only have the slider on the front page, so aside from that option, everything else is disabled.

Under What to Show you have the option of choosing how many things you want showcased.  You can choose by page, post, category or tag.  I think you can also combine more than one option, but haven't tried this.  Like I said, I chose pages to show (which in hindsight was a mistake).
You can also choose how many to show.  On that set up page, they say you shouldn't have too many or the slider becomes too slow.  I have 7 pages set up and so far haven't noticed any problems.

Under How to Show you're going to select what the theme engine will look for.  You might need to play a little bit with the order (drag and drop) until the images show.  I use NextGEN with Wordpress, and for me what worked was to have the list in this order:



The other features for the slider - color, text etc., are up to you. Try them out and see which one you like best.

Friday, July 13, 2012

Night visitors




     There are at least three different opossums coming over the back porch for snacks at night, this is one of them.  Those guys are hard to catch on camera...

Friday, July 6, 2012

Book binding

     This isn't the first time I've done notebooks from scratch, but it has been a long time since I did any craft involving paper and since I've learned a few things while doing this, I decided to share. Last month I came across a bunch of paper bags (the big, brown ones used in grocery stores) and decided to recycle them into a notebook:
     The pages were made from the bags as well as the paper for the covers and spine.  I used cardboard from cereal boxes for the (not so hard) covers and lined them with more paper bags.

     It's been a long time since I've made one of those, so I checked Pinterest for tutorials on binding.  I mixed and matched different techniques to sew the signatures together and then used gauze (yep, the stuff used for wounds) to glue to the spine.

     I then cut the card board to size (kinda) and worked on the final look of the cover.  For the lining, I crumpled another piece of the bag (where the logo was) a few times, until the paper felt like fabric.  I then smoothed it out a bit with my hands and rubbed a stamp pad over it.
     It ended up being too dark for my liking, so I painted it over with some crackle paint I had laying around.

What I've learned:

     It took me forever to cut the bag into pages and making the holes to sew them together.  Next time, I'll make a template for both the pages and to figure out where the holes should go.
     Joel likes the fancy kind of cereal (you know the ones with whole grains and whatnot?) and those come in boxes made out of recycled material.  Meaning the cardboard is less sturdy than it needs to be to make a decent hard cover.  Next time I'll glue two pieces together for each cover.
     I need to be more patient.  Gluing more stuff before the stuff you glued prior is dry isn't a good idea - as seen here:

   
     This is a photo of the second notebook I've made (because it was fun!).  This one has pages done out of what we think is rice paper that isn't good for folding.  The lining on the covers is made from crumpled gold tissue paper.


     You can see that the covers are warping a bit, that is due to the thickness (or better, the lack thereof) of the cardboard I used.