During 2009 I got an excellent response to the panorama format that I used for my 2009 DigitalMediaMagik business cards, so this year I decided to do something very similar except that I used a different panorama. Shown on the right, my 3rd-generation card design features a countryside vista from small town Vermont. For more details click thru the graphic on the right or click here to see that panorama in the Panorama Viewer.
Following last year's paradigm, the goal with the 2010 card was to deliver a more accurate picture of what DigitalMediaMagik.com is all about. The card reflects the two aspects of my business as they have evolved — website design and working with digital media. In addition, this year's card presents my LinkedIn profile (www.LinkedIn.com/in/KevinGenePammett) in an effort to further promote my services as a Principal C#, .Net and Java software engineer — possibly outside of the context of my own company.
As I expected last year, creating the design for these cards — the dilemma of which panorama to use — gave me the idea of using multiple panoramas in a new masthead for my company site which has featured a panorama animation since April '09 when I came out with a face lift for my DigitalMediaMagik.com web site.
Wednesday, May 5, 2010
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Using Seasonal Panoramas to Promote Health & Fitness
At DigitalMediaMagik.com we create marketing and promotional materials using the latest in digital imaging techniques, as we describe in this article.
The thumbnail you see on the left is an 8.5" x 11" flyer I was asked to make for an event my client calls “The Big Rocks Mile, 2010”.
Part of their organization's Health & Fitness program, this "running a mile" was to be a 3-part event and I was asked to create a flyer to promote this 1-mile run happening at the beginning, ending, and mid-point juncture of a 6-month training period.
What came to mind immediately was to use panoramas — from my Panorama Gallery — to communicate the “Spring, Summer, Fall ” timeline that was to be the framework for this 'event'.
Being many times wider than they are tall, panoramas fit perfectly onto a horizontal flyer page leaving room for captions under each picture to achieve the other goal of the flyer — to convey that this 'event' was actually going to be 3 events, taking place over the period of 6 months. In addition, the captions convey the context for the event — “Every Man Wins” — because this was not to be a traditional man-against-other-men race, but rather that each man trains throughout the 6-month period, sets a baseline for himself in the Spring, shows progress with more training until Summer arrives, and then experiences the full benefit of the training in the Fall when he realizes that this Health & Fitness program is just the beginning — there's much more ahead.
The final piece was to create a simple URL that points to the flyer: BigRocks-Mile2010, and to encourage people throughout the organization to use that as a link in their communications about the event.

Part of their organization's Health & Fitness program, this "running a mile" was to be a 3-part event and I was asked to create a flyer to promote this 1-mile run happening at the beginning, ending, and mid-point juncture of a 6-month training period.
What came to mind immediately was to use panoramas — from my Panorama Gallery — to communicate the “Spring, Summer, Fall ” timeline that was to be the framework for this 'event'.
Being many times wider than they are tall, panoramas fit perfectly onto a horizontal flyer page leaving room for captions under each picture to achieve the other goal of the flyer — to convey that this 'event' was actually going to be 3 events, taking place over the period of 6 months. In addition, the captions convey the context for the event — “Every Man Wins” — because this was not to be a traditional man-against-other-men race, but rather that each man trains throughout the 6-month period, sets a baseline for himself in the Spring, shows progress with more training until Summer arrives, and then experiences the full benefit of the training in the Fall when he realizes that this Health & Fitness program is just the beginning — there's much more ahead.
The final piece was to create a simple URL that points to the flyer: BigRocks-Mile2010, and to encourage people throughout the organization to use that as a link in their communications about the event.
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Picture Stamps — Gifts that Get Given Away Twice
Have you ever heard of Stamps.com — in the USA — or its Canadian counterpart ? Click thru for details, or… the take away is that you can create your own US or Canadian postage stamps which can then be used exactly like real stamps. You can do this for any number of promotions / reasons, including that they make excellent gifts, as I did for my extended family last Christmas.
So… what's the connection with DigitalMediaMagik.com ?
Following the tagline “You Imagine it… We make it Happen !! ” — on your behalf, we could do all of the image-editing and other cyberspace work to create one or more stamps from pictures that you provide. When the gift arrives, it looks like the familiar 'book' of stamps shown on the right.
A step beyond the stamps themselves — also available as a DigitalMediaMagik.com service — would be that I/we create a web page using the wildly flashing 3D cube navigator shown on the left, the idea being that "the story", as told by this "experience", is part of your promotion or gift. Of course… that 6-chapter story could be anything that you can imagine.
Shown here purely as an example of such a story… use the 3D cube navigator (on the left) to explore the set of stamps I created :
• Move your mouse into the center of the green background frame (to the left) to “drive” and “look at” each of the images.
• As you move the mouse (within the 3D cube frame) you are in “drive mode” — doing manipulation via mouse movement, without mouse clicks. E.g. move the mouse towards any corner of the frame and the cube begins rotating in that direction. The rotation follows you around as you move the mouse, and is faster/slower depending on how close you are to the center of the cube.
• Click on any cube face; it "zooms out", showing you the stamp image. A subsequent single click continues the rotation.
• Double Click on an image face to 'read that chapter'. In this case more detail means you see the picture the stamp was made from). When finished, your browser's "Back" button returns you to the cube navigator.
• In “drive mode” the rotation stops whenever you move the mouse outside of the green background space, and resumes when you re-enter it.
For an example where the 'chapters' are real stories, check out my "life story" done with the 3D cube navigator.

So… what's the connection with DigitalMediaMagik.com ?
Following the tagline “You Imagine it… We make it Happen !! ” — on your behalf, we could do all of the image-editing and other cyberspace work to create one or more stamps from pictures that you provide. When the gift arrives, it looks like the familiar 'book' of stamps shown on the right.
A step beyond the stamps themselves — also available as a DigitalMediaMagik.com service — would be that I/we create a web page using the wildly flashing 3D cube navigator shown on the left, the idea being that "the story", as told by this "experience", is part of your promotion or gift. Of course… that 6-chapter story could be anything that you can imagine.
Shown here purely as an example of such a story… use the 3D cube navigator (on the left) to explore the set of stamps I created :
• Move your mouse into the center of the green background frame (to the left) to “drive” and “look at” each of the images.
• As you move the mouse (within the 3D cube frame) you are in “drive mode” — doing manipulation via mouse movement, without mouse clicks. E.g. move the mouse towards any corner of the frame and the cube begins rotating in that direction. The rotation follows you around as you move the mouse, and is faster/slower depending on how close you are to the center of the cube.
• Click on any cube face; it "zooms out", showing you the stamp image. A subsequent single click continues the rotation.
• Double Click on an image face to 'read that chapter'. In this case more detail means you see the picture the stamp was made from). When finished, your browser's "Back" button returns you to the cube navigator.
• In “drive mode” the rotation stops whenever you move the mouse outside of the green background space, and resumes when you re-enter it.
For an example where the 'chapters' are real stories, check out my "life story" done with the 3D cube navigator.
Thursday, April 23, 2009
Coming Soon — TheGypsyCafe.com

In cyberspace, the new site will be my first opportunity to demonstrate the re-usable blueprint that I created using Microsoft's .NET technology to increase my productivity at creating one rich web site from another.
The picture to the left features the new logo (just the top part) — the harbinger of an exciting new beginning for my clients, Keith and Christina Doucette. I added a border and address/contact information to that, ostensibly for presentation (to make it more square) but also to make it more standalone.
Further details are available in the "Testimonial" that I wrote in the old web site to point the way to the new web site: TheGypsyCafe.com (officially opened June 3rd) to encourage customers to give it a try.
Friday, April 10, 2009
DigitalMediaMagik.com Gets a Facelift
The website is not completely finished yet, but the facelift is pretty much complete so I will take the "Easter / Holy week milestone" as my cut-off point to declare the facelift complete.
- Cross-browser support: The site (and blog) now work with a very broad spectrum of popular browsers including IE (Microsoft's Internet Explorer), FireFox (Mozilla), Safari (Apple), and Chrome (Google). Up-to-date browser usage statistics peg this coverage at 97%.
- A panorama animation on DigitalMediaMagik.com gives the pages a "constant width" and showcases one of my services — making panoramas from multiple digital snapshots
- To accomodate smaller screens, there is an "X" action on the right-hand side of the panorama animation which makes it disappear and the page redraws so you can read more without having to scroll.
- The former "menu tree", on the left-hand side of all the pages, has been replaced with something much simpler. The "Community / TalkAbout" icon — an extension of that menu — was reworked to 'fit' better and to reflect the new DigitalMediaMagik.com logo.
- I elaborated the previously-empty page about my StoryBoard (video) product, celebrating a project I did for my sister's 60th birthday.
- My "community" space — these pages — still have the same web address (blog.DigitalMediaMagik.com) but the blog has been rehosted, I got caught up wrt my backlog of articles, and I created a customized template to give the blog a much more pleasing and accessable format. For comparison, the old blog is still there… but there are no links to it ☺; the final article therein details the rehosting.
- There are a number of new "Page Elements" in the blog sidebar, including my DigitalMediaMagik.com Twitter "feed" and more About Me.
Sunday, March 15, 2009
My New Business Cards

Because the art of creating panoramas is typically just a little beyond the reach of most individuals, I have long wanted a business card that features a panorama, even though there is a huge difference in the typical print size for the two formats. Be that as it may, I was pleasantly surprised to see that even the panorama caption comes out readable on the card itself, which you can clearly see if you click thru the above graphic.
Creating the design for these cards — the dilemma of which panorama to use — gave me the idea of using multiple panoramas in a new masthead for my company site where I plan to feature a panorama animation. As an added bonus, the back side of each card shows the year in which DigitalMediaMagik.com is going to burst onto the multimedia scene as a powerhouse of personal expression and communication.
Tuesday, February 3, 2009
Official Opening of The Café Website

More traditional features of the website include "customer feedback" where clients can tell us what they think as well as sign up for the newsletter, “Daily Specials ” on a chalkboard background (to match what is actually in The Café), and a Flickr-hosted "Photo Gallery" which we wanted in order to take advantage of The Café being inside an antique store making its ambiance is truly unique.

On a different technical note… I designed and built this website, soup-to-nuts, using Microsoft's .NET technology primarily because that way I end up with a site implementation that is fluid and completely under my control. Moreover, since extensive use is made of “page templates ”, even pervasive changes to the site — as clients get a better idea of the look and feel they want — sitewide changes can be made quickly and reliably.
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