Are you using Canva? You should be.

Where have you been all my life

Recently I started hearing all this hype about a new free online design tool called Canva. So I thought I’d check it out.  It’s one of the best decisions I’ve made in awhile.

For those of us who aren’t graphically inclined and cringe from the complications of Photoshop, or want powerful tools, but we’re not sorry to take shortcuts if the results look right. If you need to make beautiful posters, invitations, cards, website graphics, or even multiple-page presentations, Canva is a design service you’re going to want to use.

Still in invitation-only beta, Canva is a design tool that makes designing easing. All you have to do is choose one of the available templates or start from a custom-sized blank canvas. You then use the Layouts and Background tabs to get a rough idea of what you want to design. These tabs are chock-full of options to choose from, whether you want a complete template or just a nice background to build on.

Canva1

Canva revolves entirely around intuitive controls such as drag-and-drop, so adding, removing, and editing elements on your canvas is almost a no-brainer.

Use the search function to browse an enormous repository of images, and the Text tab to add free text or stylized text with built-in backgrounds. While many Canva elements are completely free to use, most images you’ll see on search results are Premium, and will cost you $1 per image once you download your design. You can, however, easily upload you own photos or graphics, or use ones you have on Facebook, so while Canva’s Premium options are certainly tempting, they’re not a must.  But keep in mind while working with premium images, Canva shows a pretty obtrusive watermark over photos.

canva2

Rather than overwhelm with options, Canva gives you just a handful of picks. This is evident in the built-in color picker as well: You can change the color used for text and some of the built-in glyphs, but you’re first only presented with a limited palette of 5-8 colors that fit your general color scheme. If you know the specific hue you’re after, you can click through for a more standard color picker that also lets you feed in a hex color code.

Canva is an amazing tool for the clueless, and can come in handy for professionals too. It makes designing uniformly easy for everyone, but it’s by no means aimed only at amateurs. The simplicity and richness of the tools will get you coming back for more every day, and according to Canva’s developers, the current features are only 1% of what they have in store for us.

As it is now, Canva brings sophisticated design abilities to the masses. We can only hope future features don’t render the service complicated to use. Hurry up and request your beta invite, this is one service you won’t want to miss.

So, are you using Canva….

DIGITAL ART (1)

Photoshop: PS Defaults Provides a complete set of modern photoshop graphic presets

As a long time user and lover of Photoshop, if I was asked what would be the one thing I could change about it….my definitive answer would be the default photoshop graphic presets.  As awesome as Photoshop is and it’s ability to be a great all rounder in design, I find the graphic presets that come loaded with the program to be outdated and sometimes cringe worthy that I hardly ever use them.

By Photoshop graphic presets I mean the deplorable patterns such as the ‘bubble’ design??  Why, why would anyone want to use that pattern??  Or how about the retina burn gradients installed. Or what about the styles straight out the 1990’s such as the web button styles?? And don’t even get me started on the ridiculous custom shapes.

pattern

But before you decide against investing in the great tool that is Photoshop (because yes, even with these laughable presets this program still blows it’s competitors out of the water), let me tell you about a little gold nugget I recently discovered.

PS Defaults are a company who have devoted their time and expertise into creating some amazing new ‘modern’ graphic presets for Photoshop.  Not only that, but you can download and try their mini essentials kit absolutely free.  I did just that…and let me tell you this free kit alone improves Photoshop by about 200%!!  So imagine if you actually invested in the Real Deal, the Real McCoy, the Big Guns…the total package of 1935 graphic presets!!  I reckon you’d write PS Defaults into your will, you’ll be that impressed! Ok maybe not that far…but it’ll make using this already amazing tool into a joy because now you’ll have some mind blowing graphic presets that you won’t need to spend hours trying to create, because the guys at PS Defaults have done that for you.

The mini kit alone is worth mentioning with some useful presets you’ll be using immediately.

Useable Actions for Photo Effects

Useable Actions for Photo Effects

Real World Custom Shapes

Real World Custom Shapes

Nice Wood Patterns

Nice Wood Patterns

Modern Gradients

Modern Gradients

Sleek Adaptive Styles

Sleek Adaptive Styles

So, if you’re an avid user of Photoshop or even a hobbyist, I think you’ll will get use out of these great graphic presets.

Time for a Digital Sabbatical

Digital Sabbatical

With Christmas only 3 days away, I don’t think there’s a better time to shut down the computers, power down the devices, log out of social networks and take a well needed digital sabbatical.

The idea came to me the other day when a friend commented on facebook that she’d be out out of commission for the next week taking a break away.  It made me think, wouldn’t it be nice to take that a step further and sign off from all technology for a while too.  Get out of touch online and in touch with reality so to speak??

I know that I’m guilty of it: Intending to take a quick look at Facebook only to spend the next hour browsing my friends status updates and accompanying photos. Or only meaning to quickly post that really cute photo on Instagram, to get bogged down checking out ‘fitspiration’ for the next 25 minutes (and feeling really guilty about that Tim Tam I ate). Meaning to make a quick update to my website and finding 10 other things to fix in the process.

If I didn’t do all of the above for 3, 7 or 14 days what’s the worst that could happen?? The world’s not going to end. I won’t miss out on any earth shattering revelations or news that can’t wait.  And if it can’t wait…I’m sure I’ll find out about it anyway without the use of technology. I’m sure all that will happen is that at the end of my designated digital sabbatical I’ll feel refreshed, renewed and eager to start the year off with a clean mind and spirit.

So you decide how long you can manage or how long you think you need to recharge the batteries and get back to your happy place.  And while you’re at it….think about all the things that you’ll have time to do that you wouldn’t have had otherwise. Think about that project you’ve been dying to get to but it’s been on the back burner for weeks, months or even years? Think about the simple things you love that have become a rarity rather than a regularity because you just don’t have time….and allow yourself to indulge again even if it’s for a short time.  Because you deserve it.  And who knows what possibilities may blossom from just giving yourself some time to discover and enjoy again the small things in life.