I stumbled upon this cool web-based photo effect generator. With Explain Everything, if you press and hold on an image in the browser you can copy and then paste it into the project. That is how I added the 4 images shown in the image below.
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A quick visualization learned from reading Dan Roam's Draw to Win. I was looking for tutorial videos about making interesting 3D lettering and stumbled upon a video about overhead view perspective drawing. I decided to give it a shot in EE. Sped up video is below (I missed recording part of it). I'm working on an video artifact to put in the background of chapter openings in a multi-touch book for iBook. I'll speed this track up in iMovie, but basically I used the same map tracing technique as I wrote about previously, but then added in flags that were made by contributors. I'll use the zoomed in versions for the contributors and the whole map for the book.
I made the map below by inserting a web browser, searching for a world map, cutting out a screenshot using the cut out tool, tracing over sections with the Draw Fill tool (same border and fill color) and finally deleting the background image. Looks pretty good and is easy to replicate.
This project contains a US map with each state as a separate object for which the color can be changed. People can use it to create an electoral "heat map" in a similar manner to what is seen on the news and in newspapers. To create it, I imported a generic US map image, traced and used draw fill for each state. When finished, I deleted the background image. The states by default were all grouped together. You can ungroup them, lock the scale and/or rotation to make a puzzle or a break out map.
I had to get new shades for windows in my son's room and I generated this project to help display dimensions.
Here is a simple template that looks like a iMac or Thunderbolt display that has a live web browser and new video object ready to go.
On a recent vacation I was talking to my family members about the Harry Potter world at Universal Studios in Florida, and it got me thinking about the interactive newspapers that exist in that world. Simply looking at the layout of a traditional newspaper and using a few familiar font styles and contrasts, it was pretty easy to set up this type of look. Below is a video of the news paper with the interactive element going.
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AuthorDr. Reshan Richards. Learn more here or contact me here or follow me here! Get the Blending Leadership Newsletter with 6 simple things to check out with each edition. Opt in here.
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