Pagan Artisans

Saturday, May 30th, 2009
pagan-artisans

I’ve had a busy day and was a little afraid I wouldn’t be able to post this.. but it should be done by the time I need to post it. I should note that the pictures in this article don’t belong to me but to the Artists who made them, they all should be linked though and if anyone wants something removed, feel free to tell me, I don’t mind! Also feel free to tell me if a link or something is broken.

What I’m going today is sharing with you some of the amazing arts and crafts from Etsy that are pagan themed. Many Pagans seem to prefer to make their own items, but supporting artisans doesn’t hurt at all.

Pagan Queen Earrings Pagan Princess

These are both by RhymesWithMagic and are a nice fun way to express your inner Pagan Queen, or even Princess if that is what you prefer. (more…)

Plugins For Webserial Owners…

Friday, May 8th, 2009
plugins-for-webserial-owners

It’s been a while since we started planning this, in fact it was sometime after I wrote up and posted Design Tips For Webserial Writers in an effort to assist a group of my favourite people in an area I happen to know a bit about – finding good, solid designs that won’t turn readers away. As with that post this one is focused on Wordpress users (self hosted, not wordpress.com users, sorry!).

There is something of a difference, though. I didn’t do this by myself but with the help of someone who indeed knows a bit more about Webserials than I do. This is where Alex McG who writes the Webserial “Children of the First” comes in. After I realized Alex had commented on my Design Tips post (a whole month later, sorry!) As you can see if you go back and read the comments I mentioned that I was considering writing a post on plugin’s as well and Alex wanted to help – who was I to say no?

That being said, this has taken an inordinate amount of time to get out but I hope it was well worth the wait, I’ve never done collaborative blog posting let alone organizing list’s of things that we reconmend and it probably shows but here we go!

Also, as of this posting I believe we are both on Wordpress 2.7 so you should check to see if the plugins will work for you.

Alex has posted his HERE, please check it out.

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Design Tips For Webserial Writers

Monday, November 17th, 2008

As someone highly interested in writing in general and of late, Webserials in particular I like to comment on things, and as much as I love and support Tales of MU, by Alexandria Erin – I do wonder at the sites design. Of course, having read in excess of three hundred chapters (yes, you heard right – excess of three hundred) of AE’s work. I can honestly say I’m hooked, and even if she stays with her current site design – as long as theres something to read, I’m there.I’m also not begruding her because she has ads on her site, just so you know.

As some of you may be aware, I’ve got a little Webserial of my own, Moondust. It’s on Hiatus because I couldn’t seem to get into it or keep up – originally it was meant to be a combined effort of my friend Ashlee and myself. One of the first things I took into consideration was Site Design. Traditional Publishing has a standard of books and papers and that lovely smell that comes along with it. People love books, they curl up with them on a chair o in their beds late at night. They take them on buses, on trains and they’ve been around seemingly forever. They’re familiar and comfortable.

The internet, and therefore webserials – however have what? Technology, need for internet connections, devices that aren’t so cosy on a rainy day. To me it seems that people except to only like stories that come from tangible books.. and Webserial’s just aren’t like that, unless they have a printed edition as well.

But I’ve gone a bit off track here, I have so much to say about Webserials and I’m distracting myself. One reason people might find webserials unappealing is the look. Not all writers are artists in other respects, and far less are web designers. I use wordpress, an so do quite a few others who do webserials so I’ll use wordpress to continue this post – sorry guys who use other software.

Also I should probably mention I’m not referring to WordPress.com, but the one you can install on your own site.

So what do we want to look for in a website design for a webserial?

  1. Readability! It’s a webserial, which obvious means you need people to be able to read it. What this means seems to be lost on some, though.The main point is a good sizes and clear font, things like Arial, Veranda, Times New Roman, Georgia and the like.
  2. A pleasing but simple colour scheme – simple is optional, I suppose  – but you should want your readers enthralled by the words not just the layout.
  3. Plenty of space for your writing to shine. Please, please no tiny content columns! Too much scrolling for a relatively normally sized chapter will both annoy and scare certain people away.

Thee are certainly other things to consider, but these would be the main points. Of course, as I said before – not everyone has a clue about web design, and I know not everyone can afford to pay for someone to make them their own special theme.  Therefore, the logical option would be to find good and free themes – that could be customized easily enough.

I told you I’d get to my point eventually!

I’ve rounded up some good themes that I think are suitable for webserials and the like. I haven’t tried them all, but I got screenshots and have links and such. Below each Screenshot I’ll explain why I think it’s a good theme, and for what sort of story I think it would suit best. Remember to always check out if the theme creators give support/allow modifications and their licenses.

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NaNoWriMo: Generators

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008
nanowrimo-generators

Since it nearly ’tis the season (the NaNoWriMo season, that is) I thought I might do something vaguely useful and post some helpful links, ideas and stuff for NaNo. I may not have gotten to 50 000 words yet… but I do know my fair share of tricks, tips and useful links. Possibly more than my fair share, in fact.

So today is as good a day as any to start posting. Todays.. theme, I suppose is going to be generators. Generators are useful for any number of reasons. You might have no idea what to call a character or a place.. you might want an idea or some random occurence. Hell, you might just be bored.

Anyway, here you go. (Because writers need more tools to procrastinate with, right?)[i]

  • Seventh Sanctum – Oh what to say about this place, it has everything and anything you could want.. and sometimes things you didn’t know you wanted. From names to skills and trades to plot twists and more. It is usually the first that comes to mind and is the king in generators. The owner even generously provides a code so that you can make your own generator.
  • Serendipity – Despite the fact that it is by far smaller than Seventh Sanctum, I am hopelessly in love with this website. It’s the same sort of thing as SS, though much more eye pleasing. I’m particularly fond of the character generators – they’re useful for providing basic characters for interaction with that have a  little more substance without taking up a lot of time most of us never seem to have. Plus the Plebey Review Generator is amusing and reminds me more than a little of the infamous ff.net reviews.
  • The Demon Web – Not exactly a site with generators for writing, I believe it’s actually for DnD, that being said you could use these still if you had an action/adventure type thing going, it also has a map generator thats not too bad. It even has map colouring variations.
  • Squid – Has mostly name generators, but also has the normal items, cultures and various generators. One of the better sites, but not my favourite.
  • The Forge – I had actually forgotten about this one, until just now. It’s a unique name and word generator collection, and the presentation is gorgeous. Definitely one to try.
  • Chris Pound’s Name Generators – Not fond of this myself, it can give large amounts of data.. but from what I’ve seen it’s not formatted well. Still, if you’re willing to try it’s decent enough.
  • Springhole – This one seems to be more fun than necessarily useful, but I do like it. It has four categories – Plot, Characters, Pirates and Other. The other gen’s are fun, I think :D
  • Dire Press – Another useful yet probably made for DnD site. It reminds me a little of The Demon Web, though it has more generators. Includes fractal word generator, random encounter gen, weather, solar system… and many more. Probably most useful to Sci-Fi writers.
  • Town Name Generator – Very simple, but gives somewhat useable results, particually if you’re writing about our world.
  • Language is a Virus – This site was actuall made with NaNoWriMo in mind. It has many things and will probably come up again in other articles. By way of generators it has Character names and Pet names, but I really reconmend looking around at the other sections. Theres a reason why WriMo’s like it.
  • iG-Tools – These are map generators, to help you with your word building. It has world maps to village maps and almost everything in between.
  • Everchanging Book of Names – EBoN is a downloadable name generator, there is a free version but it is limited. I love this program, it really is very useful. I plan on upgrading whenever I get the money too. It’s really worth a good look.
  • MapMage – More downloadable generators, a fair few of them are absolutely free including BookMage, ArtifectMage and NameMage. Check out the Buy Now page to see the full list of free gens.

I think thats all for now, but if you have any more links you think should be here, by all means tell me and I’ll add them <3

Notes

  1. And I can’t really be responsible for what comes up on these. you have been warned. []