murid
3 years ago
It's a bit of a process. 1) I use my camera (any camera will do) to take a photo of my art in a small light box (So there is even lighting and no shadows) 2) I put it into GIMP and mess around with the levels until the white parts are pure white and the black parts pure black 3) Resize the image to about 400 to 600px in width to save space on the website.
owlroost
3 years ago
Hey, someone else that binds books! I've been printing out short stories and other snippets lately to bind into small anthologies- may be a good practice option.
murid
3 years ago
I just got into binding books. Still trying to get a hang of the basics. Printing out short stories and such is a good idea, I should try that.
brennholz
3 years ago
wow, it looks so... ๐ตโ๐ทโ๐ดโ๐ซโ๐ชโ๐ธโ๐ธโ๐ฎโ๐ดโ๐ณโ๐ฆโ๐ฑโ
This is better than a web manifesto, it visuallly and humorously sums up many things wrong with the internet. FINITE SCROLL, wow I remember those!
vegacollective
3 years ago
Your artwork and comics are fantastic, hope to see more in the future. Universe be with you.
lostletters
3 years ago
Sorry you have to leave somewhere you're attached to. I'm glad you aren't leaving Neocities though!
I feel you on bookbinding mistakes. I make them more often than not, honestly- it's part of the charm. To save you one of mine: cardstock is not a strong enough cover for a book you want to keep in your pocket. I was trying to make a mini composition book and that crumpled very quickly.
I used to bind sketchbooks with cardstock, but they weren't really pocket carries. Even then they were pretty worn out by the time I got to the end of them.
I usually use chipboard covered by fabric for larger bindings nowadays! Keep meaning to experiment with wood. Still struggling to find a good cover material for pocket books though since it needs to be thin and sturdy, and those traits don't often come together.
I'm at the stage where I'm still experimenting with making good bookcloth. So far my last couple of batches haven't been up to standard, so at most I use them for spines. Still need to get the basics right before I start to think about long term durability.