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><channel><title>The Pink Crow&#187; Twitter &#8211; page  at The Pink Crow</title> <atom:link href="http://thepinkcrow.com/tag/twitter/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" /><link>http://thepinkcrow.com</link> <description>Front-end design that stands out.</description> <lastBuildDate>Sun, 09 May 2010 20:58:53 +0000</lastBuildDate> <generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=abc</generator> <language>en</language> <sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod> <sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency> <item><title>Triangle Web Women, creating a custom Twitter background</title><link>http://thepinkcrow.com/portfolio/custom-twitter-background-for-triangle-web-women/</link> <comments>http://thepinkcrow.com/portfolio/custom-twitter-background-for-triangle-web-women/#comments</comments> <pubDate>Wed, 19 Aug 2009 04:03:53 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Rachel Nabors</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[Portfolio]]></category> <category><![CDATA[triangle web women]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Twitter]]></category> <category><![CDATA[twitter background]]></category><guid
isPermaLink="false">http://thepinkcrow.com/?p=187</guid> <description><![CDATA[When Rebecca Murphey asked me to design the Twitter page for the Triangle Web Women's meetup group, I jumped at the chance! It would need to encompass the group's vision... and include super heroes!]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Over the past few weeks I&#8217;ve created a <em>lot </em>of Twitter backgrounds. It all started <a
href="http://thepinkcrow.com/portfolio/rachelthegreat-com-a-portal-page-designed-to-reinforce-my-personal-brand/">when I coordinated my portal site with my Twitter page</a> which resulted in <a
href="http://thepinkcrow.com/articles/twitter-for-fun-but-not-so-much-for-profit/">a rant about twittering &#8220;for profit&#8221;</a> (ironically, that article gets lots of hits from people googling &#8220;Twitter profit house&#8221;). Since then, I&#8217;ve been designing one Twitter background after another at work. I wanted to share a very special case with you today.</p><p><a
href="http://www.rebeccamurphey.com/">Rebecca Murphey</a>, founder of the <a
href="http://triwebwomen.ning.com/">Triangle Web Women&#8217;s meetup</a>, approached me about making a custom Twitter user picture for the <a
href="http://twitter.com/triwebwomen">group&#8217;s new Twitter page</a>. She suggested I do something with super heroes, I suppose because of <a
href="http://subcultureofone.com">my work in comics</a>. I volunteered to create a background image, too, and create a complete Twitter persona for the group:</p><div
id="attachment_188" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 560px"><a
href="http://thepinkcrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/tww.jpg"><img
class="size-full wp-image-188" title="tww" src="http://thepinkcrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/tww.jpg" alt="The custom twitter background I made for the Triangle Web Women's Twitter page." width="550" height="399" /></a><p
class="wp-caption-text">The custom twitter background I made for the Triangle Web Women&#39;s Twitter page.</p></div><div
id="attachment_189" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 160px"><a
href="http://thepinkcrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/tww_logo.png"><img
class="size-full wp-image-189" title="Triangle Web Women's logo" src="http://thepinkcrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/tww_logo.png" alt="The Triangle Web Women's Logo" width="150" height="225" /></a><p
class="wp-caption-text">The Triangle Web Women&#39;s Logo -- powrful!</p></div><p>First off, I brainstormed a logo. I combined the universal &#8220;power on&#8221; symbol with the traditional and empowering glyph for &#8220;woman&#8221; and placed the two originally on an upside down equilateral triangle. Later reviews with Rebecca revealed that such a logo could give the impression that the group is a strictly lesbian gathering, so I made the triangle more abstract, as you can see on the <a
href="http://twitter.com/triwebwomen">twitter page</a>.</p><p>For the super heroines, I wanted to depict the variety that our group embraces: Mac, PC, corporate, freelance, artsy, techy, black, white, all of the above. I used lots of stars, which I got from <a
href="http://fotoristic.deviantart.com/art/Stars-60023082">this lovely set of Photoshop brushe</a>s&#8211;hey, this was a weekend project, and there wasn&#8217;t time to make a set from scratch! I was thinking &#8220;we&#8217;re all rock stars online&#8221; with that.</p><p>After scanning the artwork, I colored the heroines digitally, choosing a palette of bold, progressive colors. I wanted to be girly and fun without being pink or nauseating. I am very pleased with how the colors came out!</p><cite>This article and more by Rachel Nabors at <a
href="http://thepinkcrow.com">The Pink Crow</a>.</cite>Share and Enjoy:<a
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rel="nofollow"  href="http://technorati.com/faves?add=http%3A%2F%2Fthepinkcrow.com%2Fportfolio%2Fcustom-twitter-background-for-triangle-web-women%2F" title="Technorati"><img
src="http://thepinkcrow.com/wp-content/plugins/sociable/images/technorati.png" title="Technorati" alt="Technorati" class="sociable-hovers" /></a><br/><br/>]]></content:encoded> <wfw:commentRss>http://thepinkcrow.com/portfolio/custom-twitter-background-for-triangle-web-women/feed/</wfw:commentRss> <slash:comments>0</slash:comments> </item> <item><title>RacheltheGreat.com, a portal page designed to reinforce my personal brand</title><link>http://thepinkcrow.com/portfolio/rachelthegreat-com-a-portal-page-designed-to-reinforce-my-personal-brand/</link> <comments>http://thepinkcrow.com/portfolio/rachelthegreat-com-a-portal-page-designed-to-reinforce-my-personal-brand/#comments</comments> <pubDate>Mon, 06 Jul 2009 00:19:29 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Rachel Nabors</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[Portfolio]]></category> <category><![CDATA[border radius]]></category> <category><![CDATA[canonical URLs]]></category> <category><![CDATA[css sprites]]></category> <category><![CDATA[rounded corners]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Twitter]]></category> <category><![CDATA[twitter background]]></category><guid
isPermaLink="false">http://thepinkcrow.com/?p=178</guid> <description><![CDATA[I had to design a site that matched my Twitter page and new business cards. Using CSS sprites, canonical URLs and the little-used border-radius property of CSS, I designed and launched this personal portal in one day.]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I&#8217;m a big believer in the personal brand. So when <a
href="/articles/twitter-for-fun-but-not-so-much-for-profit/">I redesigned my Twitter page&#8217;s background</a> a few weeks ago, I was very careful to combine both my Pink Crow web site&#8217;s style with <a
href="http://subcultureofone.com">my web comic&#8217;s</a> art.</p><p>But when I began to design <a
href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/crowchick/3691248063">my matching ultra tiny Moo cards</a>, I wasn&#8217;t sure which website to put on the card, my web design business here at ThePinkCrow.com, or my <a
href="http://subcultureofone.com">award-winning web comics at SubcultureofOne.com</a>?</p><p>The answer was simple. Make a <em>portal page</em>. A portal page serves as a point of entry to the Magical Land of You for people you&#8217;ve just met. It should have links to all your sites, professional and personal, with one or the other taking precedence based on the sort of people you give your cards to most frequently. It is important to keep your social networking sites on there. Many people you meet under professional circumstances will likely want to keep in touch with you via shared social networking sites like <a
href="http://twitter.com">Twitter</a> or <a
href="http://linkedin.com">LinkedIn</a>.</p><p>Lastly, I designed the site to match my new business cards and my Twitter page so I would present a homogeonously branded image of myself. Whether visitors to RacheltheGreat.com want to learn about my comics, my web design, or my flickr pictures is up to them, but I&#8217;ve laid everything out in neat little rows, just in case.</p><div
id="attachment_179" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 560px"><a
href="http://thepinkcrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/rachel-the-great-screenshot.png"><img
class="size-full wp-image-179" title="rachel-the-great-screenshot" src="http://thepinkcrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/rachel-the-great-screenshot.png" alt="A screenshot of RacheltheGreat.com, my personal portal page that I designed and built." width="550" height="424" /></a><p
class="wp-caption-text">A screenshot of RacheltheGreat.com, my personal portal page that I designed and built.</p></div><h2>Now for the tech dirt.</h2><p>I was very impatient with this project. Impatient with browsers for not supporting things I wanted, impatient for images to load, impatient with search engines for being slow to figure out what to make of canonical URLs.</p><p>I was so impatient that I did not even bother to check it in IE6 because, let&#8217;s face it, most if not all of my traffic will come from my handing out business cards. The people I give them to use Firefox and Safari. So I&#8217;ll go back and check IE6 when google&#8217;s analytics show that I&#8217;m getting traffic from search engines, where one or two IE6 users might slip through.</p><h3>Featured techniques</h3><ol><li><strong>CSS Sprites</strong> The hand-drawn icons for the social network links are all contained in a single PNG image, called a &#8220;sprite&#8221;. Using CSS, I can use different sections of that image over and over, making it look as though I have many small icons, while in reality there is only one image. Having to only download one image saves visitors time and cuts down on the resources my server uses in serving the page.</li><li><strong>Rounded Corners with CSS</strong> Since I wasn&#8217;t expecting much Internet Explorer Traffic, I didn&#8217;t feel like slogging through Photoshop to make the rounded corners on the social links&#8217; black box, either. Instead, I chose to use the (not to spec) <a
href="http://www.css3.info/preview/rounded-border/">CSS property </a><em><a
href="http://www.css3.info/preview/rounded-border/">border-radius</a>.</em> IE folks see just square corners. I don&#8217;t think they&#8217;ll notice.</li><li><strong>Canonical URLs</strong> Search Engines <em>hate </em>repeat content. Some unscrupulous people like to copy other&#8217;s articles onto their own site to try to burst search engine rankings. So search engines now look out for pages they&#8217;ve seen before appearing with different URLs and penalize them for looking suspicious. But what if you&#8217;re twittering about you site using TinyURL? Or someone doesn&#8217;t put the &#8220;www&#8221; in a linking URL? Search engines might get confused and think you&#8217;re trying to pull a fast one. But! There&#8217;s a way around this, although still very fresh, and many major search engines are gearing up to support it better. <em><a
href="http://googlewebmastercentral.blogspot.com/2009/02/specify-your-canonical.html">Canonical URLs</a> </em>specify what the <em>real</em> URL of the page is supposed to be.</li></ol><cite>This article and more by Rachel Nabors at <a
href="http://thepinkcrow.com">The Pink Crow</a>.</cite>Share and Enjoy:<a
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src="http://thepinkcrow.com/wp-content/plugins/sociable/images/technorati.png" title="Technorati" alt="Technorati" class="sociable-hovers" /></a><br/><br/>]]></content:encoded> <wfw:commentRss>http://thepinkcrow.com/portfolio/rachelthegreat-com-a-portal-page-designed-to-reinforce-my-personal-brand/feed/</wfw:commentRss> <slash:comments>1</slash:comments> </item> <item><title>Twitter for Fun, but not so much for profit.</title><link>http://thepinkcrow.com/articles/twitter-for-fun-but-not-so-much-for-profit/</link> <comments>http://thepinkcrow.com/articles/twitter-for-fun-but-not-so-much-for-profit/#comments</comments> <pubDate>Sat, 30 May 2009 22:47:21 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Rachel Nabors</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[Articles]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Twitter]]></category> <category><![CDATA[twitter background]]></category><guid
isPermaLink="false">http://thepinkcrow.com/?p=151</guid> <description><![CDATA[Over Memorial Day Weekend, I made a new background image and coordinating avatar for <a
href="http://twitter.com/crowchick">my Twitter account</a> (psst, I'm CrowChick). While I was researching my task, I kept running into articles about "how to get the most out of Twitter," articles from people who promised that with Twitter, you could "build a publicity powerhouse" and "harness the power of the masses." This contrasts nicely with the opinion of a coworker of mine, who stated that, "Twitter is a waste of time."I agree with neither of these sentiments. Twitter is useful, but it isn't the be-all and end-all of marketing or promotion. It's best to think of Twitter as a supplementary item, like a MySpace page or Facebook presence. It can be useful on both a professional and a personal level.In this article, I'll try to dispel some Twitter myths and provide some insight to how you can get the most out of your Twitter account.]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Over Memorial Day Weekend, I made a new background image and coordinating avatar for <a
href="http://twitter.com/crowchick">my Twitter account</a> (psst, I&#8217;m CrowChick). It was oodles of fun, but before I started, I did my research (as always) and scoured the Web for resources that might help me improve my background (see the bottom of this post for a list of said resources).</p><p>I kept running into articles about &#8220;how to get the most out of Twitter,&#8221; articles from people who promised that with Twitter, you could &#8220;build a publicity powerhouse&#8221; and &#8220;harness the power of the masses.&#8221; This is of course, a very tall order for the microblogging site to fulfill. This contrasts nicely with the opinion of a coworker of mine, who stated that, &#8220;Twitter is a waste of time.&#8221; And they&#8217;re not the only person who thinks so!</p><p>I agree with neither of these sentiments. Twitter <em>is</em> useful, but it isn&#8217;t the be-all and end-all of marketing or promotion. It&#8217;s best to think of Twitter as a supplementary item, like a MySpace page or Facebook presence. It can be useful on both a professional and a personal level. In this article, I&#8217;ll try to dispel some Twitter myths and provide some insight to how <em>you</em> can get the most out of your Twitter account.</p><h2>There are 3 things to do on Twitter.</h2><ol><li>Listen</li><li>Broadcast</li><li>Respond</li></ol><p>It is said that there are two kinds of Twitter users, Listeners and Broadcasters. Listeners range from the doting sycophants of celebrities to information hounds, licking crumbs of knowledge off the plates of Broadcasters. Broadcasters simply post a lot. About everything. To the point of sometimes annoying their Listeners</p><p>Of course this is a gross generalization. I find that most people listen <em>and</em> broadcast. Some people are just more enthusiastic about posting!</p><h2>There are 3 ways to use Twitter.</h2><ol><li>To learn from your peers (web designers, embroidery enthusiasts).</li><li>To let other people know what you&#8217;re doing (to promote something, to let your friends know where you are drinking).</li><li>To keep in touch with other people (peers, family, customers).</li></ol><p>These correspond roughly to the three aforementioned actions.</p><p>I used to use LiveJournal to let my friends and other comic illustrators know what I was doing. After all, the comics community was stronger on LiveJournal than anywhere else, so I would get lots of feedback from and chances to communicate with other professionals in my field. But then I got a job working in-house for a large marketing company doing graphic and web design. I just didn&#8217;t have the time to write long-winded blog posts about comicky things anymore. I found that Twitter&#8217;s microblogging format allowed me to make several short posts over the period of one day, which helped me keep in touch with those friends of mine that had Twitter. Additionally, the web design community is stronger on Twitter than LiveJournal, so I get to learn from and socialize with a set of people who help me improve my craft. I also post links to useful web desgn resources and articles. Sometimes I even promote new articles I&#8217;ve written or things I&#8217;ve worked on!</p><p>So I do all three things: I promote, keep track, and learn.</p><h2>Twettiquette.</h2><p>In almost all of those &#8220;promote your brand on Twitter and become a GOD!!!&#8221; articles, they go on quite a bit about getting followers. Here&#8217;s the secret: <strong>Some followers are more valuable than others. </strong>There are a <em>lot</em> of people promoting their agendas online. And they aren&#8217;t really interested in hearing about your agenda. If you follow a real Broadcaster, someone who is just on Twitter to sell themselves or their brand, they may follow you back out of politeness. But if you&#8217;re trying to sell to someone who is trying to sell to you&#8230; even if they do retweet a few of your tweets, who are they retweeting them to? A large pool of Broadcasters who are more interested in twittering about themselves and growing their number of followers than listening. And trust me, when you get thousands of followers, their twitterings become a wash of background noise that you must either filter or ignore. So don&#8217;t just go following people willy nilly because they have large numbers of followers in hopes that they&#8217;ll read your tweets&#8211;they probably won&#8217;t, even if they follow you.</p><p>So start small. Follow your friends and coworkers, people you know and/or trust. When they post something of value, retweet it. That flatters the author and hopefully provides someting useful for your followers or introduces them to someone they would like to follow.  <strong>Don&#8217;t</strong> only post about yourself and your agenda. People don&#8217;t like the person who can&#8217;t shut up about themselves at parties, and they don&#8217;t like them online, either. (Unless you happen to be a celebrity of one sort or another, in which case, people will fawn all over you, but rest assured that someone, somewhere finds you boring and wishes you would just shut up.) <strong>Do </strong>respond to other tweets. It is okay for Twitter to be used, moderately at least, as a glorified IM client. Don&#8217;t be afraid to answer questions if you have answers, and likewise, don&#8217;t be afraid to query the Twitterverse if you need answers yourself.</p><h2>Twitter Myths Revealed!</h2><ol><li><h3>Twitter Myth #1: Twitter is a Waste of Time</h3><p>Only if you aren&#8217;t using it right! Truth is, you can use Twitter to stalk your rivals, learn from your peers, and keep abreast of trends in your line of work, and in general stay more on top of your game than if you sat in the ladies room reading trade journals all day. My Twitter is stuffed to the gills with industry top dogs, and I&#8217;m not ashamed to have it running on my desktop all day. And if my mother&#8217;s quiche recipe pops up under a link to a fantastic Photoshop tutorial, so much the better.</li><li><h3>Twitter Myth #2: You can become an overnight sensation! Just use Twitter!</h3><p>No. No. No. You can no more become an overnight sensation on Twitter than you can on Facebook, MySpace, or any other social media platform. The whole, &#8220;If you tweet it, they will come,&#8221; mantra is misguided. Twitter is a <em>supplement</em> to a good publicity machine, not a <em>replacement.</em></li><li><h3>Twitter Myth #3: Twitter will help you make money! Somehow.</h3><p>Not really. People are very cagey about being <em>sold to. </em>Twitter<em> will, </em>however, let you better serve and reach customers. Case study, <a
href="http://zappos.com/">the CEO of Zappos</a><a
href="http://twitter.com/Zappos"> has a Twitter account.</a> When I first joined Twitter, I immediately started following him, thinking he would twitter about one of my favorite subject, shoes. However, most of his tweets were &#8220;blah blah I am on a plane-this,&#8221; and &#8220;blah blah I shook hands with so-and-so-that.&#8221; Not only boring, but frequent! Most likely Zappos employees gained more from following him than I would, so I stopped following him. But when I noticed that my searches for size 12 women&#8217;s shoes at Zappos.com were returning apparel listings as well as footwear (a fluke of their search system), I sent him a tweet to let him know, and he responded.</p><p>Another case in point, whenever I work with a client who uses GoDaddy as a host, I inevitably end up twittering about how frustrating GoDaddy&#8217;s backend is for me. And GoDaddy&#8217;s personnel, ever vigilant on Twitter, immediately starts twittering back at me to ask how they can help. (<strong>Snark Attack: </strong>Funny, it&#8217;s faster for me to get help from them on Twitter than it is for me to <em>find </em>help in their client area!)</p><p>So Twitter makes people accessible. That&#8217;s it. It doesn&#8217;t magically make people like you or bring them in great flocks to your site.</li></ol><h2>Twitter Resources</h2><p>Here are the links I found useful on my Twitter Background Quest:</p><ul><li> DIY site Express Blog&#8217;s <em><a
title="Permanent Link to Brand Recognition: Creating a Custom Twitter Background" rel="bookmark" href="http://www.diysiteexpress.com/blog/2009/04/brand-recognition-creating-a-custom-twitter-background/">Brand Recognition: Creating a Custom Twitter Background</a></em></li><li>Viget&#8217;s <em><a
href="http://www.viget.com/inspire/pimp-your-twitter-background/">Pimp Your Twitter Background</a></em></li><li><em><a
href="http://freetwitterdesigner.com/">FreeTwitterDesigner.com</a> </em>is an online application that let<em>s </em>the Photoshop-less make their own Twitter backgrounds.</li></ul><cite>This article and more by Rachel Nabors at <a
href="http://thepinkcrow.com">The Pink Crow</a>.</cite>Share and Enjoy:<a
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