TUTORIAL SUBMISSION GUIDELINES

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Tutorial Submission Guidelines

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All tutorials submitted must follow these guidelines in order to be accepted:

- must not contain information for creating elements or papers

- must be written in a detailed manner, step-by-step, so that a beginner can follow with ease.

- please use Times New Roman font set to 12 point for easy reading

- must contain screen shots

- must include the name of your tutorial and the program it is meant for in bold at the top of the first page, along with your name and contact information underneath the title

- must be in compressed PDF format. To do this, create your tutorial in Word. Click on convert to PDF. Open the PDF file using Adobe Acrobat 6.0 (not reader). Click on FILE / REDUCE FILE SIZE. Choose compatible with Adobe 5.0 and higher. Then save your newly reduced PDF. If you do not have Acrobat, you may send the Word document to me through a YSI or RS type download. I will then convert the document to a compressed PDF.

- All tutorials are subject to review and will be published at the discretion of the administrators of this site.

- In exchange for your tutorials being published, designers will receive one week of free advertising for each tutorial and non-designers will receive shop credits.

Please contact the site administrator, Kim Hill, if you have any concerns or questions about these guidelines.


SUGGESTED TUTORIALS NEEDED

  We are interested in receiving tutorials that will enhance the experience of digital scrapping, without actually teaching how to create elements or papers. We are seeking these tutorials for the following programs: Adobe PhotoShop, Adobe PhotoShop Elements, Digital Image Suite, Jasc Paint Shop Pro, Microsoft Picture It, ULead Photo Impact, and FxFoto. We pretty much have PhotoShop 7 and CS covered. However, we do need certain tuts that are specific to CS2.

Here's an idea of the types of tuts we are seeking:

- color isolation
- creating your first layout
- duo tone
- extraction technique
- montage layouts
- rounding corners of photos
- shadowing your elements
- silkscreen effect
- stitching on a path
- text on a path
- threading a buckle through a ribbon
- using brushes, plug-ins, filters, etc.
- vignette effect
- photo enhancements such as blemish removal, red-eye correction, fixing underexposed or overexposed photos


Site design and content copyright 2006 by Kim M. Hill