Similarly, when I was in grad school, we would laugh at people who used the Excel defaults to make the charts and graphs for their scientific papers — you can spot those from a mile away. (There are much better data analysis tools out there, and at the very least, if you’re going to use Excel, get rid of the gray background and default horizontal lines…)
I didn’t even realize Word Art was still around; guess I blocked it from my mind several versions of MS Word ago.
Ohhhhhhhhhh, Nathan? Are you screwing with me? Is there some reason that your website is showing me “Makeup Secrets for OLDER Women?”
Sheesh, speaking of DECEPTIVE.
(She said, stomping away crankily….)
Meanwhile, back to the cover: Oh, Sneaky, you oughta sneak on over to our intake, at ye olden Biz; we see Word art covers ALL. Zee. TIME. Fortunately, I’m usually able to steer them to professional designers, or, at the LEAST, Derek’s DIY tool.
Hitch
EricL
9 years ago
I must have had my shot, because I don’t seem vulnerable to loving either the cover or the book.
I think I could work in some turkeys into that poem, though.
Naaman Brown
9 years ago
3D credits calling attention to undramatic, bland architecture? Perhaps the blandness is the deception that makes one vulnerable. Behind those clean white walls could be a swarm of apocalyptic zombies reduced to primal instincts not of Gluttony but of Lust! Deceptive Love … Ultimate Horror!
WordArt makes for an instantly recognizable cover. As in, everyone instantly recognizes what program you used to make your cover.
Similarly, when I was in grad school, we would laugh at people who used the Excel defaults to make the charts and graphs for their scientific papers — you can spot those from a mile away. (There are much better data analysis tools out there, and at the very least, if you’re going to use Excel, get rid of the gray background and default horizontal lines…)
I didn’t even realize Word Art was still around; guess I blocked it from my mind several versions of MS Word ago.
Ohhhhhhhhhh, Nathan? Are you screwing with me? Is there some reason that your website is showing me “Makeup Secrets for OLDER Women?”
Sheesh, speaking of DECEPTIVE.
(She said, stomping away crankily….)
Meanwhile, back to the cover: Oh, Sneaky, you oughta sneak on over to our intake, at ye olden Biz; we see Word art covers ALL. Zee. TIME. Fortunately, I’m usually able to steer them to professional designers, or, at the LEAST, Derek’s DIY tool.
Hitch
I must have had my shot, because I don’t seem vulnerable to loving either the cover or the book.
Love is like a guillotine.
Are you starting a Valentine poem. If so, I am intrigued.
I just regurgitate what’s on the cover.
I think I could work in some turkeys into that poem, though.
3D credits calling attention to undramatic, bland architecture? Perhaps the blandness is the deception that makes one vulnerable. Behind those clean white walls could be a swarm of apocalyptic zombies reduced to primal instincts not of Gluttony but of Lust! Deceptive Love … Ultimate Horror!