Archive for May, 2010

Freelance Camp, Vancouver 2010

Posted on May 30th, 2010 by emdash in Events

This weekend, Kell and I attended Freelance Camp 2010, the first of its kind in Vancouver (organizers: The Network Hub, assisted by Hummingbird604.com.) We walked in not knowing what to expect, worried that with participant-led sessions it might be boring or not relevant to our goals. However… with a $10 participant fee (going to charity) and a Saturday day slot, we felt there wasn’t much to lose. The event proved to exceed expectation. I took a LOT of valuable information from the event. It’s giving me a lot to think about, both in how I present myself as a small business and in how I DO my small business.

One thing I realized, during a session led by David Neale on Solopreneuring, that I’m not much of a freelancer anymore (if I even were one originally.) I often ran a bit like a small studio (and have promoted Em Dash Creative as such) since I’d sometimes work with teams to get projects done. Chestnut St. Pixel Foundry is very much a small business, rather than two freelancers working together. However, most topics were completely relevant to small businesses as well!

I’d like to share some of the things I have learned from just some of the sessions. (more…)



Temporary business cards

Posted on May 28th, 2010 by emdash in Pixel Foundry, Work

What can you do, when you have a networking/business event to go to, but you don’t have your business cards yet?

Kelly and I had this challenge, since we’re awaiting active phones before printing our Chestnut St. Pixel Foundry business cards. But I didn’t want to attend the Freelance Camp (the first of its kind in Vancouver!) without having business cards in hand. I mean, who’s going to remember our long (yet wonderful) company name without a piece of cardstock to remind them!?

Image: temporary Pixel Foundry business cards

Enter the temporary business card. They’re thrown together using Avery perforated paper and printed on the office inkjet. We designed them to look last minute… indeed, that’s the point. (I had a vague notion I should probably handwrite them all individually, but decided I wanted to sleep tonight instead.)

Note: That phone number still isn’t active, and won’t be until sometime next week. In the meantime, though, you can email me at that email address. If you really want to.

I’ll be sure to report back on Freelance Camp and tell you how it all goes! I’m looking forward to the event.



cspixelfoundry.com launch

Posted on May 18th, 2010 by emdash in Pixel Foundry, Work

Few things are as satisfying – to a small business – as getting your own website launched. Like business cards or a physical office space, it lends credibility and a feeling of being “official.” Chestnut St. Pixel Foundry was looooong overdue for a site that was more than just a mailing address and meta tags… and finally, we’re live!

I’m going to offend a few people I know by informing you all that I, personally, cannot stand the web 2.0 aesthetic in web design. At a certain point it crossed a line from friendly and easy-to-use to simply insulting the intelligence of the user. I mean… 24 point type telling me to login just makes me feel like I’m being unnecessarily babied… and I don’t like it. I also feel the excess gradients, reflections, etc are going to look pretty dated in a few years, forcing another redesign/refresh of the site… I like classic and timeless design that carries a business or organization through any period of time.

So, web 2.0 was out for the Pixel Foundry’s website. Instead, we looked to Victorian inspiration: scrapbooks, photo albums, wallpaper and decor, etc. We came up with the idea of using a page for the background… a literal interpretation of the website as a page of information.

There was a lot of technical stuff here to solve. Earlier versions of Internet Explorer hate transparent .pngs… but there are still people out there unfortunate enough to be using IE6. The paper “page” background takes a while to load, and until it does, the site doesn’t look right (this was resolved with a “loading” script that wouldn’t display the site until the page was finished.) We wanted to feed JUST ONE post at a time from our tumblr but tumblr’s default embedding script is fairly inflexible.

We took a bit of liberty with facebook and LinkedIn‘s logos… which I think is fine since almost everyone else does it too. There’s probably as many graphic variations on the facebook icon as the rss icon.

My favourite though are the vintage-looking pictures of Kelly and I. I was tempted to add more members of the team (eg. Leeloo and Godiva, my two black cats) with similarly-treated photographs, but held off ‘cos that would just be silly. And of course our website is 100% serious.

Next step: iPad version.