Pontiac Trans-Am Firebird Photo Composition

I love Firebirds and American Muscle cars in general. Maybe the universe will be good to me and I’ll be able to afford to own (and run) one some day! Some guy in Leitrim has a Firebird amazingly and I see/hear it pass by the odd time and drool. The Firebird is a version of the car model featured in ‘Knight Rider’.

Anyhow, for a bit of much needed Photoshop practice, I decided to edit a photo of a Pontiac Trans-Am Firebird into a photo of my dining table (no idea why the table!) and try make it look like it was really there instead of on some American highway.

Here’s what I started with, said pic of a Firebird on a highway sourced from Google (sue me):

Original

And a pic of my dining room table top, taken at an angle to try to emulate the viewpoint in the Firebird pic above:

Dining Table

After careful cutout of the car with the Pen tool and placing it at the right point on the Table image as well as a bit of Perspective Lens Correcting of the table, I was able to make it look like it blended in a bit. Here are the steps I took to finish the composition off:

  1. Duplicate the Car layer and set the new layer to Multiply blend mode to make it fit in better light wise, after all the original car pic was taken outdoors daytime and I’m putting it in an indoor, dusk shot,
  2. Select the car layer and add a Photo Filter Adjustment layer with a colour sampled from the table. This helps the car fit in colour wise.
  3. Duplicate the car layer again and completely darken it then use the Transform tool to squash it down to the rough shape of a car shadow underneath the original car layer. Remember to match the shadow direction with the light source coming from the windows at the back of the table,
  4. Blur the car shadow layer until it looks about right then add a layer mask and tidy up with the brush tool,
  5. Create a new layer and select a soft brush, black colour and paint in the shadows under the wheels. The previous shadow step leaves the car looking like it’s hovering off the table and painting in a small shadow under the wheels really brings it back down,
  6. I had to cut out the windows too and lost a bit of the sun shield built into the windscreen but I was able to draw the missing bit back in, match the colour, add noise and blur it a bit to make it look like it was always there,
  7. Reflections for objects like this are very tricky but I managed to get a slight bit of a reflection in my shiny table for the wheels using the Transform – Skew & Gradient/Mask Tools.
  8. I then used the Burn (darken) tool to further darken some shaded bits and the Dodge (brighten) tool to make those beautiful chrome and gold strips really pop out,
  9. Next, I duplicated the Table layer and blurred the new one then added a layer mask and gradient to blur behind the car but keep in front in focus, just to give the image better depth,
  10. Finally, to add a bit of mood to the pic, I added a Vignette on top of everything and stuck a layer mask on it then a gradient on the mask to fade it out towards the back of the image,

And after sticking my business logo on the car door (as you do) using Transform – Skew/Warp, here’s the final composition. Like?:

 

Pontiac Trans Am Firebird

 

Random Content Based on Date Using PHP

Like most Web Designers, I like to put a small design credit link on the bottom of sites I build. I’ve got some work out of doing this in the past so it seems like a useful thing to do. Apparently there’s a reasonable amount of people out there that will have a look for a credit link if they like the look of the site and need one themselves. Trouble is, with 100’s of sites built and the same footer code added manually to each one, what if I wanted to change the credit text or link? I’d have to manually change it for every site!

Another thing to think about is the amount of websites I have of my own that could benefit from some good backlinks with good anchor text from clients sites. I’ve got one main site (this one!) but a whole pile of other ones that have a decent precence online that I can be contacted through, ie – my Twitter, Facebook & Linkedin accounts, other domains I own etc..

What I’ve done is add a small bit of PHP code to each client site footer that calls content from a single file on my own site/hosting. This means that if I want to change my footer link on 100’s of different sites, I can do it in just one place and they all get updated automatically! In that file I’ve got some more PHP code that shows different anchor text linking to my different websites based on what month of the year it is. Doing this automatically keeps the credit link fresh and dynamic and has the added benefit of showing you via Analytics which month/link was most effective in driving visitors to your sites.

I’m no PHP expert so the following code maybe easily improved upon by those who know more. If anyone has suggestions on how to improve, clean up or expand on this basic idea, please leave a comment below!

Here’s sample code for each website footer:
[php]<?php $reverb = file_get_contents(‘http://www.yourdomain.com/footer-credit.php&#8217;); echo $reverb; ?>[/php]

Here’s sample code for showing different content based on the month of the year:

[php]<?php
$d=date("M");
if ($d=="Jan") {
echo "site by <a href=’http://www.reverbstudios.ie’>Reverb Studios Design Leitrim</a>";
} elseif ($d=="Feb") {
echo "site by <a href=’http://www.reverbstudios.ie/web-design/>Reverb Studios Web Design</a>";
} elseif ($d=="Mar") {
echo "site by <a href=’http://www.webdesignleitrim.ie’>Web Design Leitrim</a>";
} elseif ($d=="Apr") {
echo "site by <a href=’http://twitter.com/reverbstudios’>Twitter.com/ReverbStudios</a>&quot;;
} elseif ($d=="May") {
echo "site by <a href=’http://www.facebook.com/ReverbStudiosDesign’>Facebook.com/ReverbStudiosDesig</a>&quot;;
} elseif ($d=="Jun") {
echo "site by <a href=’http://www.linkedin.com/in/reverbstudios’>Linkedin.com/ReverbStudios</a>&quot;;
} elseif ($d=="Jul") {
echo "site by <a href=’http://www.reverbstudios.ie/prices/’>Reverb Studios Design</a>";
} elseif ($d=="Aug") {
echo "site by <a href=’http://www.reverbstudios.ie/contact-me/’>Reverb Studios Digital Desig</a>";
} elseif ($d=="Sep") {
echo "site by <a href=’http://www.reverbstudios.ie/testimonials/’>Reverb Studios Multimedia</a>";
} elseif ($d=="Oct") {
echo "site by <a href=’http://www.reverbstudios.ie/blog/’>Reverb Studios IT</a>";
} elseif ($d=="Nov") {
echo "site by <a href=’http://www.reverbstudios.ie/recent-projects/’>Reverb Studios Leitrim</a>";
} elseif ($d=="Dec") {
echo "site by <a href=’http://www.reverbstudios.ie/latest-news/’>Wordpress Web Design</a>";
} else {
echo "site by <a href=’http://www.reverbstudios.ie’>Reverb Studios Design</a>";
}
?>[/php]

Credit to @barryflood for the Date idea.

Leon

Popular Ways to Extend Your WordPress Site

So you’ve had a basic WordPress site built for you (possibly by me!?) or put one up yourself and you’ve got your design in, pages, images and blog/news posts up and you’re pretty happy with how it all looks. Did you realise you can add to the core WordPress functionality by installing plugins to make it do almost anything you can imagine? For me, that remains probably the best feature of WordPress along with it’s ease of use.

Wordpress Plugins

So what extra things might you want WordPress to do?

Send Newsletters

Capturing email address from your website and building a database of contacts then keeping in touch with them or sending offers etc is an excellent way to market and this plugin is probably one of the most popular WordPress additions requested by my clients:

Reverbstudios.ie/706/wordpress-newsletter-plugin-review/

Sell Stuff

All business have something to sell. If it’s products then it makes sense to sell them off your own website. This plugin will do all you need including show categories, add postage, paypal and credit card payments etc..:

Reverbstudios.ie/868/wordpress-shopping-cart-plugin-review/

Capture Data & Details

It’s highly recommended that you have some kind of conversion form on your website, ie a form that gathers information from visitors either automatically (browser, operating system, referring site, etc..) or manually by asking them questions. For businesses that are service based these kind of forms can be made take a payment or deposit too:

Reverbstudios.ie/1787/gravity-forms-wordpress-form-plugin-review/

Contact me if you you’d like any of this functionality on your site.

Leon

Link to a Point in a youTube Video

Just spotted how to do this. Cool! I don’t know about other people but I’ve not got the patience to sit through more than a few minutes of online video so if I need to show someone a video but only want them to see one particular part of it, I can create a link that goes directly to that part.

Here’s a normal youTube video URL:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XsP6uRJbeyg

And here’s a link to a  lovely string break 3 minutes in:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XsP6uRJbeyg#t=3m1s

The syntax to stick on the end of your youTube link is “#t=3m1s“, phonetically, “Time=3 minutes and 1 second”. You can grab the URL of a point in a video a bit quicker by moving the Play Head to the required point, Right-clicking it and choosing “Copy video url at current time”.

Also, if you type in 3:01 in a youTube video comment, it automatically links it to that point in the video!

Live and learn.

How To Add Your Google + Profile URL & Image in Search Results

Google have just started recognising the ‘rel=author’ tag on sites which means you can use it to show your Google + profile photo and url on any google search results showing pages/posts from your site. I think it’s a cool thing because it kinda highlights your result among others..at least until everyone starts doing it! It also gives your result/business a personal edge or a bit of branding right in the results page:

Google+

Here’s how to set it up, not rocket science: Add the following line to the ‘Head’ section of your website html:

[html]<link rel="author" href="<a href="https://plus.google.com/xxx/posts">https://plus.google.com/xxx/posts</a>"/>%5B/html%5D

Where the ‘href’ url is the url to your Google + profile. Next, make sure you have a link pointing back to the site you’ve added this tag to, in your Google + profile. It should go in the About – ‘Other Profiles’ or ‘Contributor’ Section. Finally, make sure your Plus one’s are public in the Google + profile settings and that you have chosen a suitable Google + profile pic! You can test whether it’s set up right or not here – Rich snippet test. Leon

Poll: Why Can’t The Home Nations Play Football!?

After Ireland’s 4:0 defeat to Spain last night and the seemingly huge gulf in class between the sides, I got thinking about why it might be that teams from these parts, Ireland, Northern Ireland, Wales, Scotland and England don’t seem to have the skill or comfort on the ball that nearly all other continental and Eastern European teams seem to have. After all, the game was invented around here wasn’t it!?

How hard can it be to pass the ball around? We’re all small countries so player base/pool is small but what’s England’s excuse!? Give your opinion below:

New Live Chat Support System

I’ve just added a professional Live Chat/Support button to ReverbStudios.ie, (top right, see pic below) so clients, potential clients or website visitors can have a quick chat while on my site if they so desire! If the button says “Online” then I’m available, if it says “Offline” then I’m out but you can still send a message and I’ll see it when I’m back.

Live Chat

How To Create an Introduction Video for Your Website

You see them a lot on website home pages these days, the Video Introduction Monologue where some guy (or more frequently, cute girl) talks to you directly in a short video, often to introduce the company, website or product. The idea being that the friendly face and language of the company owner or employee will garner a little more trust in the visitor than the normal website textual content would.

I was asked how to go about creating these kind of videos by a mentoring client recently and I sighed and proceeded to talk about hiring cameramen, video editing & conversion, uploading, embedding etc..when in fact all you really need to do a basic one at least is a decent webcam with mic (or separate headset mic) and a youTube account.

Here’s how:

Create a free youTube account if you don’t already have one.

Click “Upload” in the top right corner.

On the following screen click “Record from webcam”.

youTube UploadOn the next screen you’ll have to allow youTube to connect to your webcam so tick “Allow” and close.

AllowNext just check the settings at the top of the webcam preview to pick your preferred audio device. Normally the built in webcam mic is too far from you to grab decent sound at a good volume so select your headset or other mic from the drop down list instead.

Mic Settings
Next, click the Record button center screen and have a play around to get a good position and sound level. Sound level is measured on the right so aim to get a good input but not in the red too much. Press stop when finished and you’ll be given 3 options Preview, Publish or Re-record. You just want to preview for the time being to see how it turned out and if all is well click Re-record to complete your video.

When you publish the final video you can easily grab the video embed code or URL off youTube and paste it into your wordpress site or web page to show to visitors. Remember, youTube is regarded as the second biggest search engine on the net so make sure you tag your created video with the right keywords while publishing.

Some Video Shooting tips:

Make sure lighting is decent in the room and that there’s not too much in the background of the shot to distract people. There’s nothing worse then a dingy, dark webcam video shot in a ‘busy’ bedroom. There’s connotations attached to that look that you’d rather not achieve!

Keep the video short. Attention span on the net is not what it use to be.

Be yourself, be real, be engaging, sell yourself.

Don’t speak in monotone!

Leon