Tag Archive for: graphic design

Towards the end of 2020, I got it in my head that I wanted a Cricut cutting machine. I threw out some subtle hints – like putting it on my Amazon wish list and hoped Santa would consider gifting me one. He didn’t but what he gave instead was loads better (but that’s for another post to talk about). So I saved some money and took the plunge myself in January and ordered myself a Cricut Air Explorer 2. It’s a pretty blue one like in the photo. Lots of blogs, Instagram posts & Youtube videos later I felt pretty confident when the machine arrived. People seemed to really stress how difficult Design Space is to work with (it’s not. I mastered Adobe Design Suite. I can certainly handle Design Space). Did I just say that out loud? For the most part Design Space IS pretty intuitive yet I am sure I haven’t unlocked all it can do. For now I am working on mastering my sticker game.

The most frustrating part – aside from weeding vinyl (forget Design Space, GAH! Weeding sucks!) – has been figuring out the best settings to die cut stickers. It depends on your paper, if you laminate your stickers, how new your blade is, etc. Well my blade is NEW. I was copying the settings of some pretty popular crafters and I just wasn’t getting clean cuts. And while I know this stuff takes practice all I could hear was the Cha-CHING! each time I wasted paper & laminate. I needed to perfect this QUICK. Did you know that when you go into the materials settings in Design Space, you can edit not only the pressure but also how many passes that blade makes? Now seasoned Crafty Susans are thinking DUH! Well, excuse me. I’ve had this machine a month. I have always tended to just skip to the good part – read my grade school report cards – “Kris needs to learn to read directions.” Word of advice from this newbie? Pay attention to those YouTube videos. They are very helpful. And thank you to whoever suggested doing a double pass on laminated stickers. Game changer.

So while I am feeling pretty good about my stickers, vinyl is another story.

 

This is one of my first attempts at a vinyl decal. It took 3 tries to weed it without the vinyl sticking to itself or Snape’s wand snapping off. Snape’s wand. The jury is still out on this decal. I have gone through the car wash once so far and that wand made it out ok but when I went to dry the car, I wiped the towel over the window and it came peeling off. So I pushed it back on and it is doing ok. I do think that the decal will need to be replaced and I may need to adjust the artwork so that the wand is a little larger. I just hope it doesn’t look weird because I have always loved this piece of art.

My next attempt was a Grogu (Baby Yoda) decal for my nephew’s car. This was a lot easier. I only messed up & had to re-do it once. 😀

 

My next project was t-shirts. My daughter saw the holographic HTV at the store & said we should get it. And I managed to make her this shirt for our upcoming Mouse House trip in May (remember that cool gift that I got from Santa?):

Easy peasy. Now to take on LAYERING the vinyl.

 

Not bad. BUT I did get some heat lines on the design – in particular the Mickey “O” when I ironed on his buttons. So that sticks out at me like a sore thumb but the kid said she didn’t notice and will wear it. Now, keep in mind that the only heat press that I currently have is the Cricut Mini Press. Yes. I did these shirts with that. It’s possible if you do it piece by piece and yes, it IS a pain in the butt to do it that way. And YES. I have been coveting the Cricut Easy Press 2 (12×10). But right now I just can’t justify the cost just so I can make us a couple shirts for our vacation. Someday, though…

This is my next project – a pair of shirts for our journey to Batuu.

So far, I have managed to mess up 1 shirt because the tiny details of Grogu’s face didn’t weed (I tried to draw on his nose with a pen. BIG mistake!) & I couldn’t see the weed lines of the glare on his balloon.  Yes, I have a light board. Yes, I pointed additional light at an angle. I am just freakin’ blind, even with glasses. I think one of those magnifying glass/light thingies is in my future. I heard about the baby powder trick to see the weed lines. I may break down and do that if necessary but man that sounds messy and knowing me, IT WILL BE. My 2nd attempt was also a weeding disaster. I was so focused on Grogu (which DID turn out better albeit his nose is still too small) that I missed one of the swoosh lines from the Millennium Falcon taking off. GRRRRR!! I have cut that part off and may put Grogu on an old pair of capris. So that was a whole roll of black HTV down the tubes. I have purchased another roll – a different brand that I hope to have better luck with. But I have to replace the shirt I messed up on.

This is becoming an expensive hobby.  So I will have to save up to CRYcut for another day.

Killerwebs is a name that my brother thought up for me back in 1995 when I was first getting into website design. I didn’t even know what a website was. The internet was still something foreign to most households and as I was starting my senior year in college, I was asked to be the content creator for a country music interest group for the Prodigy Online Service (that is how we got online back in those days – dialing into a service like America Online, Prodigy & CompuServe which were the big three services most chose from). I was drawing a blank…had no idea what to call my “little business” and it just fell out of his mouth.

With a shrug, I agreed to the name and Killerwebs was born. It’s a domain name I have owned ever since. The website has gone through many iterations over the past 25+ years but my heart was never really into promoting myself which is what business websites are supposed to do. After working for other people and on their projects, honestly the last thing I wanted to do was MORE website design for me. So the site would come and go and come back again. I eventually got rid of all together several years ago, keeping the domain because (1) it’s a GOOD name, (2) I have had email addresses using it for decades and (3) you just never know….

When the pandemic struck in the spring of 2020, like most people I had a little bit of worry about my job. I had been working for the past 5 years a marketing/art director for a local company and I wasn’t sure if it was something that would survive the shut downs and subsequent economic consequences many businesses ended up having to endure. But it not only survived, it THRIVED as our company was deemed an essential business – as we manufacture sanitation equipment – and people who were losing their jobs were investing in themselves in a big way and starting their own sanitation companies. So while my job was secure for the moment, the reality of changing administrations that aren’t very economy friendly and a boss who loves to express his pessimism about where the economy is going, has led me to ponder — A LOT.

When you’re alone during a pandemic, thinking is something that one can do quite a bit of. And I had made it a personal goal during this time to look a little more inward. Part of that was to get better at saying daily prayer. So one day I asked, “So, what should I do? I’m listening.”

A little background… 13 years ago, when my daughter was 5 years old, we had come home from a day of work (for me) and a day at Nana’s (her) and walked into our home to find my husband of 10 years laying lifeless on our living room couch. Without getting into too much detail in THIS particular post (maybe later, I dunno), he had succumbed to an addiction. And while his death was accidental, it started an avalanche of self-doubt (I felt betrayed & abandoned), fear (our future plans were now non-existent & I was now a single mom to the most perfect human being I had ever met) and enormous amounts of grief (self-explanatory. Being a widow SUCKS!) So my faith was shook. I have been clinging to this unfinished business with my husband thing for the past decade + and it’s been pretty much survival mode ever since.

Fast forward to NOW. My daughter is in college. She has decided that a path headed towards a career in medicine is for her (and she’s serious about it), she’s met a boy (and she’s serious about him) and all of a sudden, I don’t see much of a path in front of me any more. I could always count on putting all my energy in HER life but now I realized that maybe I should start thinking about mine. So one morning, I asked, “What’s next?”

It was a very noisy ride to work that morning. I conducted a business meeting with myself entirely in my head and the answer came plain as day, “BRING BACK KILLERWEBS!” It seemed like such an awesome idea, that I had already decided by the time I reached the office, that I was going to purchase website hosting and I was going to do it right this time. I reached the office at 6:15 and by 6:30 I had paid for three years of hosting and I was sitting at my screen – a blank slate, ready for me to make some magic.

I nodded and patted myself on the leg and said outloud, “good start, Kris. We’ll revisit the site tomorrow.”

Good plan.