20 Creative Coffee Cup Designs You Need To See |
- 20 Creative Coffee Cup Designs You Need To See
- Design Ebook Covers: Tools, Tutorials & Photoshop Actions
- A Look Into: Flow – A Full-Featured Task Management App
20 Creative Coffee Cup Designs You Need To See Posted: 21 Oct 2013 08:01 AM PDT No coffee, no workee – nothing wakes you up better than a cup of Joe. You are probably on a cup right now. It’s the nectar of Gods that get you up and running early in the morning, and serves as fuel for the rest of the day. Since many coffee lovers grab their java to go, coffee cup design is the best way to stand out from the crowd and promote your brand to the outside world. Moreover, most customers will choose bright vivid coffee cups compared to white boring ones. Today we have put together 20 creative coffee cup designs to give both designers and coffeeshop owners a fresh new way of coffee packaging. Recommended Reading: 40 Unusually Creative Mugs, Cups & Glasses Sweet & Freezing by Maurício Cardoso Mokkaccino Crafts by HiredMonkeez Illustrated Coffee Cup Design by Steve Simpson LaBaguette – print visual by Tomas Muller Caribou Coffee by Anna Giacomini Double coffee by Karolina Kedzierska Cialven Coffee by Carlos Jiménez Coffee Cup Mockup by Graphic Soulz Coffee Time bag and cups by Studio43 Starbucks Coffee Cup by Oksal Yesilok PACKAGING: COFFEE SUPREME (NZ & AUS) by Hardhat Design Dripp Hot Paper Cup by Salih Kucukaga Coffee Depot / Packaging by Phil heroux.Designer Dress Your Cup by Greg Ballard Throttle Coffee by Jeremy Wallace SIS. Deli + Café by Rasmus Snabb My Sky is Raining Coffee | T-shirts, Cup Design by Fatima Alghafli Demitasse Creamery by Emily K Armstrong |
Design Ebook Covers: Tools, Tutorials & Photoshop Actions Posted: 21 Oct 2013 06:01 AM PDT If you are going to publish your first ebook (or have plans to do so), good for you. Self-publishing ebooks is opening up a lot of doors for many an aspiring author, trying to make a name in the genre of their choice. One of the biggest problems these writers will face is discoverability of their work. You first need to get people to notice your ebook before they would be interested to get a copy. Aside from the marketing and promotional work you can pour into getting your book out there, there is also the need for a great ebook cover design. Fortunately there are plenty of tutorials to help you get started. We also have plenty of tools and Photoshop actions to help you create 3D ebook cover images for both hardcover and paperback. Make your work stand out from the crowd with a little help from Photoshop. Recommended Reading: Beginner’s Guide To Book Cover Design Here are the shortcuts for your quick reference: Ebook Cover Design ToolsIf you don’t have Photoshop, or want a quick and easy way to create a 3D ebook cover image, here are four tools that will do most of the work for you. 3D Box Shot Maker. Select your spine and cover images and tweak the parameters (box size, shadow and reflection) to your liking. 3D-Box Maker. Just choose your front and back covers, and spine image, then click Create 3d-box. Free Ebook Cover Creator. This tool offers you a choice of four templates. Once you’ve selected a template, just upload a flat image of your book cover and select a background color, and you’re done. MyEcoverMaker. Unlike the previous tools, this one provides a number of background images (or you can opt for your own), fonts and text design options to choose from when designing your cover. Ebook Cover Design TutorialsPrefer to have more leeway in the design of your ebook cover? If you have and use Photoshop, here are 9 tutorials to check out and follow. Photo Album Cover – How to make a photo album-styled cover from a template image. Design An Ebook Cover In Photoshop Using Action – Design a cover and turn it into a 3D ebook cover using Photoshop actions. Make A Professional Ebook Cover In 5 Minutes – How to use Photoshop actions to create a professional-looking 3D ebook cover. How To Create A Digital Ebook Cover – Design and create a 3D ebook cover from scratch. E-Book Cover Tutorial – How to turn a pre-existing flat cover image into a realistic 3D ebook cover. How To Create An Ebook Cover In Photoshop – How to turn a flat cover image into a 3D ebook cover, complete with shadow. How To Create An Ebook Cover With Photoshop – How to create a simple 3D ebook cover image using a template. How To Create Ebook Cover Tutorial With Photoshop – How to create a 3D ebook cover from scratch. How To Make A 3D Ebook Cover Image – How to make a slightly different style of 3D ebook cover. Ebook Cover Design Photoshop ActionsThere is also the option to automate some of these actions and you can do that by running some actions in Photoshop. Here are 9 links to action files that you can try out. E-Cover Action Script 2 – Turn your flat cover image into an angled 3D hardback ebook cover. Hardback Ebook Cover Action Script. Create a 3D hardback ebook cover, complete with shadow. Free Photoshop Action For Ebook Covers – Turn flat to 3D curved paperback cover with reflection and shadow. ECover Profile Action – Try a slightly different perspective for your 3D ebook cover. ECover Reflection PS Action – Like reflections on your cover? Here’s a Photoshop action to help. ECover Slim Photoshop Action – Go slim with this paperback style cover, plus reflection. ECoverSuiteElite. The motherload of more than 60 actions designed to create 3D ebook covers in a variety of styles and angles. Softcover Ebook Cover Photoshop Actions. A large selection of free actions to turn your flat image into 3D soft covers, with a lot of different styles and viewing angles. Hardcover Ebook Cover Photoshop Actions. A large selection of free actions to turn your cover image into a variety of different 3D hardcover ebook covers. |
A Look Into: Flow – A Full-Featured Task Management App Posted: 21 Oct 2013 03:01 AM PDT For those who have never heard about Flow it is a powerful task management suite which offers an online webapp, iOS mobile app, and a native Mac OS X application. It is a simple way to organize tasks and also delegate tasks across any sized team of people. The guys over at MetaLab have recently updated Flow to run on a much smoother interface. In this guide I want to go over some of the major changes you can find within the new Flow release. Some of the old components have been re-worked and other interface features are completely new. After a bit of practice the UI almost becomes like second nature. It’s a magnificent product for individuals or teams who just need an easy tool for project collaboration. Guided Signup TourRight from the Flow homepage you can quickly sign up for a free trial account with your name and e-mail address. The application itself is hosted on a subdomain which separates the webbapp from the site itself. I was very impressed with the initial tour you get right when logging into your account for the first time. Right after clicking “sign up” you are redirected into the application tour. This is full of animations and modal boxes which feel very smooth. It also introduces important pieces of the interface which may seem confusing without context. Immediately you should choose a name for your profile and for your default Workspace. This is where all your tasks are held and where you can keep up with teammates. If you have the time to go through the Flow tour I would highly recommend it! But I also think this guide will help out newcomers to get started using Flow as a productivity tool. Tasks and WorkspacesEach big project or team should be grouped into Workspaces. These spaces have their own inbox, lists, calendars, and team members. You may customize workspaces using cute icons to quickly distinguish between them. Many people who only need to manage a single team or group of tasks will be fine using one single workspace. But the ability to run multiple workspaces together makes Flow exceptional for multi-tasking. It is possible to split up tasks from your company, your freelancing projects, and your personal life all under this single application. Now tasks may be organized into the inbox, or split into lists by any organization style you choose. Lists may be grouped together if you have groups of tasks which are related or need to get done together(ex: frontend & backend development). Creating a new task within a list or the inbox uses the exact same interface where you can setup a due date, assign the task onto a team member, or even tag it with certain keywords. The Workspace DashboardEach workspace opens up to the dashboard panel. This will lay out all the recent activity regarding new tasks, new lists, completed tasks, assigned tasks, task comments, and other similar actions. You can get a full view of the whole project in a nice timeline fashion much like a familiar news feed. Each workspace also has its own calendar for laying out tasks with due dates. This may help to visualize time frames on a project and how far along you are towards completion. On a desktop or laptop the calendar page is built with infinite scrolling in mind, so you can traverse a collection of months at one time. You may also create new tasks right from the calendar view by double-clicking on any day. Flagged tasks are distinct items which appear high-priority or in need of attention. You can flag any item by clicking on the mini flag icon you’ll see in the task view. This feature may not be exceptionally useful, but the functionality is there for each workspace. All the other links beneath Dashboard are fairly straightforward just to help organize tasks based on who they are assigned to & estimated due date. Adding New MembersIf you have other people who need access to your workspace then you can invite them with only an e-mail address. While viewing your workspace click the small gear icon located at the very bottom of the left navigation pane. Click and select “Workspace Preferences” from the popup menu. This brings up a new window with a section labeled Members. If you click the link to “Add people” a small set of input fields will appear. Notice that you can select one of three ranks for new members.
During the first tour you are provided an option to add members into your first workspace. After the first time you probably won’t need to go back adding too many extra people. But it is apart of the overall functionality and it’s a good idea to get accustomed to how this all works. Lists and GroupsUsing a list or group is a primary solution to organizing big projects with multiple sub-sections of work. A group doesn’t contain anything but more lists and while a list may stand on its own, you may fit it easier to group them together. Note that a list also isn’t something that has to be used forever. You might create a group for a small side-project of the company which has a few internal lists of things to do. Once they are all done you can archive the lists so all the tasks are marked as complete and moved out of the upcoming section. Think of each list as different sticky notes for keeping related tasks together based on project requirements or the team members involved. If you hover a list you’ll notice the small gear icon appears over to the side. Click this icon for a drop-down menu full of links to edit the list details. Clicking on “Edit & Share” will bring up a new window where you can choose who is specifically allowed to view these tasks. It may be just you or it may be only a few people. By default new lists are public to every team member in the workspace so you’ll need to customize this option if you want to hide certain tasks. Also notice when you are in a list or any other task view, there is a search bar found at the very top of the page. You can start typing some keywords or phrases and Flow will automatically filter out tasks for you. This is one primary reason to use tags because it helps provide better search results. Task Comments for DiscussionIn the old version of Flow descriptions were applied onto each new task. These descriptions have been removed in lieu of more direct user comments. These are much easier for handling discussion where team members can drop extra information or ask questions about the task. By clicking on a task from any view it will display a new pane on the right side. This has details about the task along with a small comment form. Once you select the field a number of extra features appear. Click the small info icon in the top-right corner of the textfield to get tips about writing in markdown. Another huge feature is the ability to share any type of file with other members of the team by attaching it to a comment. You can link files by dragging-and-dropping them into the window or browsing your HDD. Also if you connect into your Dropbox account then you can pull files directly into Flow through the API. This file sharing functionality is incredible and it almost behaves like a repository for items necessary to the workspace. Overall ChangesBasically this new version of Flow is amazing. The dashboard includes not just simple task management, but updates of any actions handled in the workspace. You can see which team members have left, joined, assigned tasks, even dropped a few comments or uploaded some files. It truly brings together all the features you would expect for a team-based project management solution. Another big improvement is the expanded internationalization for a wide variety of additional languages. Also the mobile web view has been optimized for smartphone browsers along with retina screens. Flow works great on any modern device and even with so many features it never feels too bogged down. I also really like the notifications window and search bar found near the top workspace icon. You can check out the latest activity and search for anything within the workspace, be it people or tasks or whatever. This new version of Flow can change your scheduled work habits. It may take some practice getting used to the interface but it is certainly worth the effort. If you ever get lost in the interface try clicking on the small question mark icon found in the bottom left navbar. This icon displays a menu with links to online guides for learning the application, notable keyboard shortcuts, and even a method to re-start the intro tutorial walkthrough. There are even more helpful mini-tutorials which pop up from time-to-time as you start using Flow more frequently. If you have questions that you cannot seem to answer then don’t be afraid to contact support or visit the Support Center page directly. Reviewing the Mobile iOS AppFlow also has a free iOS application which runs on iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touch devices. This is perfect for checking up with projects on-the-go or completing tasks when you are away from the computer. The older version of Flow has a similar application but not as polished and organized. Right when you first sign in you’ll get a quick tour of the features. The UI focuses around a 5-tab navigation bar for the workspace dashboard, upcoming tasks, your assigned tasks, lists, and a menu with the other accessible features. Using the sliding navigation toggle in the top-left corner you may switch between other workspaces quickly from any view. Even on my older iPhone 4 this app runs very smooth. That is probably the best part about using the mobile application is the beautiful user experience. Sometimes you may feel overwhelmed with so many tasks to finish, but Flow lays out your work in a clean and simple manner. The upcoming tasks list along with your own assigned tasks will help you narrow down focus onto what really needs to get done. Considering it’s free I would definitely recommend grabbing a copy of the mobile app if you have an iOS device. Even working by yourself this can be a great product if you need to organize multiple lists of project work. If you use a Mac computer then you may want to grab a copy of the Flow App for OSX which is also free to download. ClosingWith all the various task management solutions out there, it can be tough switching over to something new. Anyone who has used Flow in the past likely remembers it for the extraordinary features and killer UI. This update brings in some brand new functionality which stays true to the core of Flow’s design – easy project management for individuals or teams. While I do feel this application can work a lot better for managing groups of people or projects, it can also work marvelously as a singular to-do project management application. Other features like the calendar and project lists are realistically essential once you get into a common workflow. Be sure to check out the Flow website if you have some extra time, and if you have other questions or comments about the article feel free to share with us in the post discussion area. |
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