DIY Subway Art Tutorial

Few things make my eyes happier than some good ol’ subway art.  Perhaps what I love the most about subway art is that it requires little to no artistic skills and can be done for free on your computer using any kind of image editing software.  Now, for those of you who are all “but I don’t have Photoshop!” — worry not!  There are some great, FREE programs available, and they require no downloading.

I’ve always used Picnik, but tragically, it went away about two weeks ago (I shed a few tears).  However, before departing from the cyber world, Picnik gave a few recommendations, including Aviary, Picmonkey, and the Google+ Creative Kit.

The latter I’ve steered clear of simply because you have to have Google+ to use the program.  While I do have a Google+ account (why, I don’t know), it’s not something I’m not feeling particularly warm towards (I get about a dozen “so-and-so has added you on Google+” notifications a day and considering that I don’t know any of these folks, I have been sufficiently creeped out).

However, I am digging some Picmonkey.  It’s silly-easy to use, it’s free (download-free, too), and its structured almost exactly like Picnik — the only noticeable exceptions being that it doesn’t have some of the fonts that I desperately miss from Picnik (talk about first world problems).

PicMonkey

So, with this tutorial, I’ll address how to make subway art with Picmonkey, though feel free to use your own preferred program.  (Heck, you can even use Paintbrush on your computer like I did for our Christmas postcards.  Just know that in a simpler program like Paintbrush, once you place text, you can’t move it without taking a piece of the background with you.  This works fine if your background is white, but otherwise, it won’t really work.)

Because Picmonkey is technically a photo editing program, you have to upload a photo first — before you can access any of its fab features.  I’m sure there are more complicated ways to do this, but here’s what I do:

I open Paintbrush, resize my canvas so it covers the screen (in case it isn’t that big already), then I use the bucket tool to fill the canvas with whatever color I want for the background.

You can find more choices if you go to colors, then edit colors, then define custom colors:

As far as I know, you can’t look up a specific color by its HTML color code, so that’s one downside of Paintbrush.  If you’re dead set on a particular shade of whatever, then I recommend just saving the white canvas as an image (later I’ll show you how to color it in once it’s uploaded into Picmonkey).

This is usually what I end up doing — I’ve got a saved image on my computer called “white bg” that I can resize and reuse all I want.  Whether you go the white canvas or some-other-color route, you can save the colored canvas once you’re done and upload that one to Picmonkey.

So, let’s say you’ve gone the way of the white canvas.  Of course, you can stick with the white, but if you’re feeling less vanilla, you can make a colored rectangle to cover the entire image.

Go to the left hand toolbar, click on the icon with the different shapes, and select the black rectangle.

Create a rectangle by pulling the shape across the screen until it covers all of the white.  Another toolbar window will pop up, and from here you can change the color of the rectangle.  You can also type an HTML color code in the upper right hand corner and hit enter if you’re feelin’ fancy.

Next, you need to decide how big you want the final product to be.  I always prefer 8 x 10 (think how you’re going to print it and then frame it), so I use the resize tool in the left hand toolbar and resize it to 720 X 900 pixels (make sure to deselect “keep proportions”).

From here, you can move on to adding text, or you can save and reopen the new colored background.  It takes an extra minute, but I recommend the latter.  If you don’t save it, you’ll encounter a lot of trouble once you start adding more layers (the text will be one of these layers).

After you reopen Picmonkey and upload your new colored background, it’s subway art time!  (This is where you say “Oh boy! Oh boy!”)

When doing subway art, it’s ideal to go one line at a time, making sure the text space is full all the way across.  Typically, three or four fonts are used– preferably the boxier, less curlicue ones, and about three of four colors are used.  Fortunately, there is no subway art police as of yet, so do whatever you want — knock yourself out.

You can add text by going to the left hand toolbar, clicking on the capital letter P, and typing in the text box a the top.  Once you’ve typed what you want for the top line, click “add.”  The same toolbar window will pop up (as it did before with the rectangle).  Pick your colors and size, then pick your font in the left hand tool bar.  It certainly takes a little playing around, but once you get the hang of it, it’s downright fun!  (Anyone else get excited about fonts and colors like I do?)

Like I said, I recommend going line by line.  If you want to achieve the unique look of subway art, you should fill all of the text space horizontally and vertically.  So, if you get to the end of a quote or series of words (or whatever you’ve typed) and you still have empty space, go back, make some words bigger, isolate just one operative word in a sentence and fill an entire line with just that (like I did with “love” in the Corinthians verse), add a bit of clip art (like the hearts I used), get creative.

Once you’re happy with your image, you can save it by going to the bottom left hand side of the screen, click on — just try to guess — “save,” and you’re done.  If you’re like me and you’re wanting to frame the final product, you can print it off on your printer (boo), or send it to Staples via their Copy Center website.

I highly recommend this last one; it’s always my go-to since I hate buying color ink and prefer the quality I can get from Staples’ slightly fancier machines.  I mentioned it before in this post, so you can go there for the whole scoop, but basically for a mere fifty cents you can send it to their website and pick it up in the store.

Then plop it in a frame and gaze at it with adoration.  Obviously.

 

So, if you’ve read through this whole post (that’s commitment) and you want to join the cool kids subway art club, but don’t have any ideas for your text, here are a few suggestions:

  • Quotations (“I think therefore I am”)
  • Verses from scripture (like above)
  • Poetry (rhymey poetry words)
  • Names of family members (Susie Johnny Eugene Alouicious)
  • Old adages and sayings (Haste makes waste)
  • Daily reminders (Floss your teeth and take your vitamins)
  • Related words within a theme (chocolate caramel marshmallows)
  • Song lyrics (You are my sunshine, my only sunshine)
  • Names of places you’ve lived (Mobile Atlanta Lancaster New York)
  • Favorite things (white copper kettles and warm woolen mittens)    :)
Here’s another one I did recently that is sort of a combination of sayings:
and here it is framed:

Your turn!  Go make some subway art, then send it to me as an attached image:  Thegingerpennypincher@gmail.com

…then we can play show and tell (no pet Komodo dragons required)!!!

P.S. — The blog got a facelift!  If you get my posts through a Reader or by e-mail, swing on over to the website and tell me what you think!  (It’s a work in progress for sure!)

Ransom Note Art

I’m back… Post-flu!  In the past two and a half weeks, I’ve used more tissues than I can count, watched more Netflix than I am proud to admit, eaten less food than I thought healthy (remember my previously discussed low opinion of food?), and lost ten pounds (what?!).

The latter was not intentional, but I guess it doesn’t upset me too much, however in no way do I endorse getting the flu as a new weight loss regimen — doctors everywhere would be very angry-eyebrows with me.

But seriously, don’t get the flu.  I’ve never had a less productive two and a half weeks, and I basically fell off the face of the Earth.  And didn’t blog in almost a week and a half.  Weird.

But did I mention I’m back?!

Ok, so it’s no secret that I love words as decor, as evidenced here, here, and here.  Today, I’m sharing a little crafty-times project that I’ve done before.  It was on my living room wall, pre-Christmas, but it came down for the holidays because it looked kind of crazy busy behind the tree.  It hasn’t made its way back onto the wall… Until now…. And I thought I would share the details of it with you folks (and because a couple of you asked way back in some e-mails what exactly that blurry thing was on the wall).

So here it is:

Card stock, a glue stick (no annoying ripples that way), scissors, and some rather eye-catching magazine font-age.  Not exactly rocket science, but it was a fun project to do with stuff we already had laying around, namely old magazines.

Perhaps you recognize the Facebook “f”?

I chose to put it in a quasi-fancy gold frame because I liked the eclectic mix of the casual, ransom note art with the “gilded,” detailed frame.

I feel like my high school, collage-lovin’ self would give 2012 Courtney a little head nod of appreciation… if she wasn’t too busy thinking she was too cool for school… who knows?  High schoolers are all so much fun.  (Sarcasm with spirit fingers.)

Hope you enjoyed my little show-and-tell — Mayhaps it will inspire you to use some found objects of your own to fill an empty wall! (Doesn’t everyone have that little empty wall space that just begs for a framed thing… or a sconce… or a stuffed animal head?  Ok, maybe not the last one.)

Things That (P)inspire Me: Words, words, words…

Polonius:

What do you read, my lord?

Hamlet:

Words, words, words.

-Hamlet, Act 2, Scene 2, by some old guy… rhymes with “steaks beer.”

(Thank you for humoring my theatre and literature nerdy-ness for just a moment.)

Ok, I looove DIY wall art, but I lack the key artistic skills necessary for the more obvious things (painting, drawing, etc.). However, I’m a big fan of words as decor, or typography as most of the blogosphere is referring to it (though the definition of the word typography is a little narrower than just “word art,” but I’ll ignore that for the sake of simplicity).

Last week, I posted about using Wordle.net to make fun, customized word clouds. After posting this, I got all excited about words as decor… then looked around my apartment and realized I was kind of already doing this (oh, the things I do to compensate for my lack of artistic skills):

These Mr. and Mrs. pillows in my bedroom…

Pinned Image

The word “LOVE” right above the bed…

Pinned Image

See the “YUM” letters in the kitchen?

Pinned Image

Even one of my Christmas gifts to my brother involved words: Scrabble Tile Magnets

scrabble tile magnets

Variations on a theme, as you can see. So, I decided to probe the depths of Pinterest (along with a little Google image search action) to curate a collection of other examples of words as decor. As always, click on the image to take you back to the original source website.

Pinned Image

Dresser with words made out of nail heads

Source: Fresh Home Ideas

Pinned Image

Oh, Anthropologie...

Source: Me and Jilly (but originally featured at Anthrpologie)

Happy.(p.s. all these pictures are from the archived files on my computer. If you know where they’re from, please share and I’ll be happy to give credit!)

aw...

Source: Scrap Studio

Pinned Image

No, you are MY sunshine!

Source: Cellar Designs’ Etsy shop

Pinned Image

Rug

Source: Home Goods blog

Pinned Image

Click on the image to take you to a blog tutorial about how to do lettering without a stencil!

Source: That’s My Letter

Well, obviously I would love Scrabble tile pillows... who doesn't?

Source: Emma Smart

Top 500 SAT words shower curtain -- It's sold out, by the way, but I could totally make one of these.

Source: Urban Outfitters

Eye chart wall art

Source: ROC Eye Chart Art

Pinned Image

Cardboard letters wrapped in a sheet of moss

Source: Pottery Barn

Pinned Image

Yarn wrapped letters

Source: Cotton & Curls

Pinned Image

a map of the world

Source: The Meta Picture

2011-mapletter2.jpg

Letters wrapped in a page of a map

Source: Callaloo Soup

Framed letter collage

Source: eighteen25

Oversized Textured Wall Letters

Letters wrapped in string and tissue paper

Source: Kids’ Activities Blog

Pinned Image

Large quote on plywood

Source: Nothing but Bonfires

Pinned Image

"Love" string art

Source: Que Linda

Ooh… I especially like the last one. Reminds me of this project, but a slightly different technique. Hope you enjoyed my finds!

Grab a button if you were featured in this week’s round-up!

Link URL: http://thegingerpennypincher.wordpress.com

Image URL: http://thegingerpennypincher.files.wordpress.com/2012/03/feature-on-the-gpp-button.jpg

Other things you might fancy…

Scrabble Tile Magnet Tutorial

Books and Nooks: The Living Room Edition

The Odyssey of the Curtain-Rod-Bookshelf Thing

20120415-093503.jpg

Valentine’s DIY Printable (No Photoshop required!)

If you’ve been following my blog since its inception in September, you know that I’m CRAZY about Christmas decor, but not nearly as enthused for the other holidays.  Not that I don’t enjoy them as well, but I don’t have a pumpkin/autumnal leaves wreath… or a motorized turkey that sings, I don’t know, a Thanksgiving song?  (Do these actually exist?)

Valentine’s Day is no exception.  Usually, I spend this holiday with my three Valentines (husband and two dogs, of course)… and maybe there will be a meal out at a restaurant…  Or more likely, we end up cooking at home because we usually haven’t made a reservation anywhere and don’t want to brave the crowds and the lines… and the explosion of pink and red decor (not really my two fave colors).  

However, this year I decided to give in to the blogosphere-style peer pressure that’s been breathing down my neck.  (Seriously fellow bloggers, you guys are crazy about February 14th).

Then, I realized something curious once I took the plunge and actually started planning some Valentine’s posts:

I think I might be digging this Valentine’s thing….

???

Weird, right?  But seriously…  I think I might even be coming around to pink and red.  Maybe…

So here I am, post-plunge, and I plan on sharing a few V-day ideas with you over the next couple of weeks.  Glitter, sprinkles, and a general feeling of mushy-ness may be involved.  (Don’t say you weren’t warned.)

Today, I’m sharing a fun printable idea… great for Valentine’s cards.  I found the original method on Pinterest (where else?), and it was one of those where I went “Duh!  Why didn’t I think of that?”  But I didn’t;  a smart lady from Black and White {Side by Side} did.  (Check out this blog, as well as the instructions!)  It’s so easy — no Photoshop or even really fancy computer/design skills needed!  Just MS Word, Paintbrush, and about 5 minutes!

Here’s a screenshot of what I whipped up (again, using the method found at Black and White {Side by Side}):

And here’s a close-up (it’s “I love you” in various languages):

And here’s a printable if you want this one:  The GPP’s I love you languages printable

Or better yet, make your own!  It’s so easy…  

One mo’ again, here’s the link so you can learn how:  Black and White {Side by Side}

Enjoy!

Other stuff  you might fancy…

Wordles:  Free, Easy Typographic Art

State String Art

Upcycling Wrapping Paper and Tissue Paper

Wordles = Free DIY Typography Art!

wordle

If you’re like me, you’re a bit artistically challenged, at least when it come to painting, drawing, sketching, etc.  And if you’re like me, you’re often financially strapped and unable to shell out the big bucks for real art (Ah… some day…).  However, one of my favorite DIY ways to create art, especially typography-style art — without having to resort to stick figures and crayons — is to use a lovely little website called Wordle.

 

Straight from the website, Wordle is “a toy for generating ‘word clouds’ from text that you provide.”  Best of all, it’s free!  You may need to download a Java applet if your computer doesn’t already have it, but that’s free (and painless/easy) as well.

How it Works…

Well, of course you can check out the FAQ on the website for some real help, but in case you’re wanting a quick-start guide and don’t want to wade through the bajillion FAQ (they’re so darn helpful), here goes:

First, click on the “Create” tab at the top of the screen.  From here, you can type in as much text as you want (tip: the more words you type, the better your wordle will look).  You may also enter the URL of a blog, website, or del.ici.ous username to make a wordle of their tags (I don’t personally recommend this feature, it never turns out as interesting as I hope it will).

Things to keep in mind…

The size of the word is based purely on how many times you type a single word.  Type it ten times, it should be quite large; just once, it will be the smallest.

To put phrases into your wordle, separate the words with a tilde character —-> ~  (no additional spaces needed).  So if I wanted my Wordle to have the phrase “I love you.” I would have to input it as: I~love~you.  Get it?

Again, the more words the better.

Next, copy and paste all of your words and phrases into a text field of some sort.  This is tres importante because once you hit “Go,” you won’t be able to go back and change anything — all the text will be lost if you go back on your browser or hit “create” again. (I just paste mine into a MS Word doc, just in case I notice a typo or want to add more words after I hit “go.”)

Hit “Go” to generate a wordle!  Ooohhhh….. Aaaahhhh…….

From here, you can alter the font, color, and layout of your wordle.  Play around with the different features until you find what you’re looking for.  You can also create a custom color palette, changing the background as well (so it’s not just limited to black and white, in case you were wondering).

You can’t save wordles from the wordle website because they are Java applets, however you can take a screenshot of your Wordle and edit it in Paintbrush!

“How do I take a screenshot?”   What a fine question!  :)

On your computer’s keyboard, hit CTRL and the PRTSC/ SYSRQ key (bottom left hand corner and top right hand corner, respectively).

Then open Paintbrush (or a similar program) and hit CTRL + V to paste the screenshot.

From here you can use the cutting tool in Paint to cut just the Wordle.

Then on your keyboard, click CTRL + N to open a new Paint window, choose to not save the current window, then hit CTRL + V one last time to paste your cut Wordle on the Paint canvas (isn’t it purdy?).  From here you can minimize the white space of your canvas by pulling it in from the sides (look for those handy arrows that creep up when you run your mouse over the sides).

Finally, you can save the cut wordle by going to “File” at the top of the screen, clicking “Save As,” and giving your Wordle a name (then, you know… save it!).

Now that you have it saved as an image file, you can do whatever you want with it!  I think I’ll be sending my to Staples to get printed (their color printing is so much better/cheaper than what my printer can do).  Then it’ll go in a frame and I’ll stick it on the to-be-revealed-one-day-art-wall (we’ve still got some work to do).

But first, I have to decide which one to pick/print.  Josh and I honeymooned in New Orleans, and it remains one of our very favorite places to go.  I thought of as many NOLA related words as I could, then typed those into the Wordle text field and voila!

Three fun options for the future art wall:

(This first one has a typo…  I know, I know…)

or…..

wordle

 

or………

 

 
 
 I think I’m leaning towards the second one. What do you think???
 

Other things you might fancy…

State String Art

Handmade Gifts

More Handmade Gifts