Welcome!

Debbie Ridpath Ohi reads, writes and illustrates for young people.

**PLEASE PARDON THE CONSTRUCTION DUST. My website is in the process of being completely revamped, and my brand new site will be unveiled later in 2021! Stay tuned! ** 

Every once in a while, Debbie shares new art, writing and resources; subscribe below. Browse the archives here.

Instagram Twitter Facebook Youtube
My other social media.

Search DebbieOhi.com

You can also Search Inkygirl.com.

Current Projects

 

 

Search Blatherings

Use this search field to search Blatherings archives, or go back to the Main Blatherings page.

***Please note: You are browsing Debbie's personal blog. For her kidlit/YA writing & illustrating blog, see Inkygirl.com.

You can browse by date or entry title in my Blatherings archives here:

 1997 - 1998 - 1999 - 2000 - 2001 - 2002 - 2003 - 2004 - 2005 - 2006 2007 - 2008 - 2009 - 2010+ (current archives)

Login
I'm Bored Bonus Page
Downloads

Entries in Cartoons/art/photos (64)

Thursday
Apr032008

Urban Tapestry's 15th Anniversary



Above: For Illustration Friday. Theme from last Friday: "Homage." I opted for a tongue-in-cheek interpretation. :-)

[9:20 am EST update: Just got the official phonecall from my doctor - the follow-up mammogram and ultrasound were all clear. I'm going to enjoy FKO -so- much more now, woohoo! Thank you again for all your support and encouragement.]

Leaving for FilKONtario today! This time I'll be taking a bunch of stuff to sell in the dealer's room (my first time), including acrylic paintings, greeting cards (including my new Blush cards from the UK, which I just found out are going to be sold in JAPAN, woohoo!), 8x8 prints and one (1) piece of pottery. The pottery is a joint project between my friend Luisa and me; she created the hand-thrown pottery and I painted it with a Little Nightmare design.

Urban Tapestry is also donating a special "Squirrels Are Evil And Taking Over The World" package that includes a CD recording of a new song (plus the lyrics/chords), a talking Evil Squirrel, and an original vampire squirrel painting by yours truly.

Starsoul


Our concert is tomorrow night, and I think it should be fun. We'll be including some old songs we haven't performed in a VERY long while as well as a couple of brand-new songs. It's our FIFTEENTH anniversary as a group this year! We've started writing a group history, if you're curious. The version online is very rough; I'll be polishing it after FKO, and Allison will be adding Part 2.



Concert at Digeri-Douze in UK, 2000.
Photo by Godfrey Joseph.



Many thanks to those who posted in response to my abnormal mammogram Blatherpost; thanks especially to those of you who shared your own experiences.

I haven't yet received the official okay from my doctor, but I'm still hoping to hear before I leave for FKO today.

Hope to see some of you at the convention! Have a great weekend, everyone.



Outside the recording studio
for our first album (1993)




Livejournal comments

Thursday
Mar272008

Illustration Friday: Pet Peeves

Illustration Friday: Pet Peeves


I created the illustration above for Illustration Friday. Theme this past week was "Pet Peeves."

Only a week until FilKONtario, woohoo! I'm going to selling stuff in the dealers' room for the First Time, by the way: some mini-paintings as well as greeting cards. My Blush line of letterpress cards arrived yesterday and look AMAZING. I'm so SO pleased with how they turned out. I'm ordering more to sell on Etsy but right now I only have 10 of each design; I'm keeping some for myself but will be selling a few of these at FKO.











I'll also be selling some of my greeting cards for writers.

Tonight I'm getting together with Allison and Jodi for our last rehearsal before the convention. In addition to rehearsing for our Friday night concert, we're putting together a fun package for Interfilk. Hint: it involves squirrels.

Very much looking forward to hanging out with them (Allison and Jodi, not the squirrels). It's been a bit of a weird day.

Babylon Five Virgin Updates



SPOILER WARNING: The blog posts below focuses on my reports while watching Babylon Five for the first time. An LJ feed is also available. If you haven't seen B5 yet and don't want spoilers, please DO NOT click the links below.

Season 2, Episode 29: Soul Mates
Season 2, Episode 30: A Race Through Dark Places
Season 2, Episode 31: The Coming Of Shadows

And here's a cartoon I recently posted on BoardGameGeek. The "wood for sheep" bit is sort of an insider joke for those who play Settlers Of Catan:

If The Easter Bunny Were A Gamer




Livejournal comments

Saturday
Mar152008

Online video survey

The Scrabble Addict


I've only recently started exploring YouTube more closely and I quickly discovered that my hesitation was well-founded: HOLY TOLEDO, is this place a time-sink.

Not just for instructional videos for every kind of discipline and hobby you could possibly imagine, but fascinating documentaries, music videos (pro and amateur), and adorable animations like the following Simon's Cat videos:





Both videos are by an English animator called Simon Tofield who works for an animation company called Tandem Films. Thanks to Jeff for pointing me to these videos.

What about the rest of you? Do you tend to regular check online videos? If so, what type? And where?

Babylon Five Virgin Updates



SPOILER WARNING: The blog posts below focuses on my reports while watching Babylon Five for the first time. An LJ feed is also available. If you haven't seen B5 yet and don't want spoilers, please DO NOT click the links below.

Cover spoiler, JMS poster, and a song

Pilot: The Gathering




Livejournal comments

Wednesday
Mar122008

Will Write For Chocolate updated



Will Write For Chocolate has been updated.

I don't think I've mentioned lately how much I love Scrivener so here I go: I LOVE SCRIVENER. Scriptwriting (for my graphic novel project) is super-easy, and you can customize the formatting. Sadly, it's only available for Mac only right now. I don't feel at ALL guilty, though, because SO often I come across cool-sounding apps that I get all excited about but then find out aren't available for Mac people.

Here are the answers to yesterday's Game Identification Challenge:

Battleship:

Battleship


Scan:

Scan


Password:

Password


Outburst:

Outburst


Funny Bones:

Funny Bones


Poleconomy: The Game Of Canada:

Poleconomy


Dominoes:

Dominoes


Labyrinth:

Labyrinth


Diamant:

Diamant


Bananagrams:

Bananagrams


I think I must have played at least half a dozen games of Bananagrams this past weekend. It's short and quick, plus can be played by two people. Some luck, some skill, and can be played by kids as well as adults.

Musicstuff / cookingstuff:



Finished writing two songs this past weekend. Time was of the essence since Urban Tapestry is singing both of them in concert at FilKONtario early next month! Allison and Jodi are coming over tomorrow for an all-day practice. We're also hoping to put together a homemade CD of songs for donation to the Interfilk auction, but it will depend on how it all comes together during the session.

I'm making Beef and Chickpea Curry With Spinach from the The Healthy Slow Cooker by Judith Finlayson. Slow cooker meals are great for this sort of get-together; I can just dump the ingredients in during the morning, focus on the music practice in the afternoon, and everything will be ready by dinnertime!

Tonight I'm making Thai-Style Coconut Fish Curry from the same cookbook above. I use Not Your Mother's Slow Cooker Cookbook by Beth Hensperger and Julie Kaufmann more frequently but Finalyson's gourmet recipes lean toward unusual combinations of ingredients and that appeals to me sometimes, making the additional prep worth it.

And now I'm hungry.



Livejournal comments






Friday
Mar072008

Comparison of Make-Your-Own Greeting Card Services: Zazzle

Greeting cards


As some of you already know, I've been gradually building my greeting card collection at my Cafepress shop; you can see some samples above. I'm using Cafepress for now because I have a Premium Shop there, but I'm also investigating other services in case I can find something better. Feel free to put in a request for any favourite cartoons/images I've posted in Blatherings, Inkygirl or other sites in the past, and I'll see if I have a high-res version that's suitable for a card.

Here are collections of some of my images; feel free to suggest any image for a card:
Sketchbook
Writing cartoons

Also feel free to suggest a particular strip from any comic series I've done in the past. Please note that making a suggestion does not obligate you to buy the card. :-)

For my service comparison, I'm focusing on those that will enable me to upload a digital picture and enable people to buy printed cards online. I made a feeble attempt to do the research a couple years ago, but was overwhelmed by the variety of choices.

This time I decided to go about it somewhat more methodically. Before you read any further, you should be warned that if you want to save the most money and can afford to print your cards in bulk (hundreds at a time) or want to be able to oversee the process (e.g. colour tweaks, etc.) throughout, you'd probably be better off going to a local printing service.

My situation, however, is different. Time is more valuable to me right now than money...I would rather take a cut in profit and have someone else manage the printing, selling and administration, packing and mailing. I would rather take the time saved and put it toward my writing or illustrating.

I focused on researched well-established services to decrease the chances that they'd go out of business anytime soon, and so I'd be able to find more reviews online. I also wanted a service that a big enough presence online that people might find my cards through the main site rather than always through my blogs.

I also wanted to make sure that any service I used would not try to grab copyright beyond what it needed to print my cards.

Please keep in mind that these findings are based on my own experience. For each of the services I'll be mentioning, there were always people who had bad experiences with the company as well as people who were loyal fans of the service.

I heard good things about Zazzle, so I decided to check them out first. Zazzle lets users create a wide variety of customized products (t-shirts, etc.) but I'm focusing on their greeting card services. I'll be covering other services in future Blatherings.

I recently got a Zazzle mailing, by the way, announcing their launch of Profile Cards (which look a LOT like MOO cards) and multi-sized Business Cards.

But right now I'm focusing on Zazzle's make-your-own greeting card services:










FactorRemarksRating
Copyright/image protectionOnly smaller, low-res images are available to the public. Artist keeps all rights.
User interfaceClean design.
Set-up experienceEasy-to-user interface. Optional customizations include uploading own header image or choose from templates.
Quality of productGood heavyweight card stock. Colours seemed a bit dark to me. Zazzle logo on the back, but at least the user can upload his/her own image to the back as well.
Price of cards/shippingMore expensive than other services.
Artist payment.Standard royalty rate is 10%, but you can select a rate up to 99%.
Marketing tools.Tools/widgets to help you sell cards on MySpace and Facebook, send-to-a-friend, invite-a-fan and fan club, share this URL, create HTML link to your gallery, Zazzle Flash panel to add to your blog.




Here's what the cards cost:





I ordered 10 note cards (4" x 5.6") for US$2.19 each and 10 greeting cards (5" x 7") for $2.49 each.



Someone buying a single card from Zazzle would pay $2.49 for a note card and $2.99 for a greeting card, which is more expensive than other services I checked out.



Here are their shipping costs, within the U.S.:





Airmail to Canada/Overseas: 1-9 cards $3.99, 10-49 cards $12.99, 50-99 cards $29.99.

Description of card stock from the website:



"Ultra-heavyweight (120#) card stock with a gloss finish. Printed with a unique process that imparts a rich depth of imagery and an almost 3D-like effect. Each card comes with a matching envelope.



Free boxed sets for orders of 10 or more."



Payment/Commission to artists:



From their Nonexclusive License Agreement:



"Royalty. Zazzle will pay you a royalty for all sales of Public Products incorporating your Design ("Royalty"). Zazzles standard royalty rate is 10% ("Standard Royalty Rate"), but you have the option of selecting any royalty rate between 10% and 99% (in increments of .1%) for each of your Designs as incorporated in each Product category ("Your Royalty"). If you select a royalty rate greater or less than 10%, Zazzle will change the retail price to reflect the increased royalty rate payable to you."



Copyright



Good image security; only smaller, low-res images are available to the public. Artists keep all rights. You can specify whether or not you're allowing your image to be changed or incorporated into other people's creations (I always say no).



Extra customization



Unlike the other services I've looked at so far, Zazzle allows a user to add an image to the back of the card:



The cards themselves were of excellent quality. The image printed out a bit darker than how it looks on the screen.



User interface and Marketing tools



Clean user interface design, and of all the services I checked out, I found Zazzle the easiest for uploading a new image and posting it for sale in your own customized gallery. They have a variety of templates to choose from (one-click to change the look of your Gallery) or you can upload your own image.



Zazzle also provides you with HTML you can paste into your blog or social networking profile (like MySpace) to display your "Zazzle Panel."

SUMMARY



Good quality cards, but the cost/card is a tad higher than I'd like. In order to make any profit, I'd have to charge a user even more. I'm going to keep looking, and will post results here.

Follow-up on the death of Gary Gygax:



Order of the Stick tribute

XKCD tribute



Livejournal comments