Showing posts with label Blogging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blogging. Show all posts

Pinterest 101 For Bloggers: Things You Should Know

Pinterest 101 For Bloggers: Things You Should Know

I am a bit obsessed with Pinterest. At any given time I have about 30 windows open with Pinterest, looking at different things, pinning them, using the ideas as inspiration for everything from blog posts to my new baby girl nursery. Pinterest is one of the biggest social networks out there, and if you have a blog you should be on Pinterest.

Why??

high traffic from Pinterest

This is why. It's a big traffic driver. A single pin on Pinterest can result in thousands of new visitors just to that post, and hopefully some of those visitors will become regular readers.


Optimize your pinterest profile

The best way to get traffic to your blog from Pinterest is to first become someone fun to follow on Pinterest. Who wants to follow a pinner that only pins ads once a day? No one. And if no wants to follow you, no one will see your pins.

Specialize your boards!
Believe it or not, more boards = good. I'm a beauty blogger. I don't have just one board about beauty. Instead, I have a mascara board, a perfume board, I have a hair inspiration board, a "good hair day" board for tips and product reviews, an eye makeup board... you get the picture.

One tip I can also add to help highlight your own content is to create boards only for your own content. These boards should be front and center at the top of your Pinterest profile. It's fine to have the topics overlap other boards, since those boards should also be featuring the content of other people. So, I have a 15 Minute Hair board, Great Hair board and a Good Hair Day group board that I started. When I write a hair post it can be pinned to all three!

Pin other people's things, not only your own
It really is boring to show only your own items. If you see a great pin that would be a good fit for one of your boards, you should pin it. Who cares where it is from? Chances are your followers will also find it interesting. You want to pin things that are interesting, drawing people over to your boards, where they can poke around and find more amazing content. If some of that content is your own, then even better!

Pin throughout the day
Not everyone can pin at the same time of day, let alone be in the same time zone. There's a lot of info out there about the "best" time of day to pin, and really, none of it is based on much info and most of it seems to be conflicting. A lot of women will look at Pinterest throughout the day, there are peak times. Think about the typical day of a woman (80% or so of Pinterest users are women). They probably have time to check Pinterest first thing in the morning (6:30-8:30?) before work or getting busy with their day. They might have time to look at it before dinner, and likely after dinner during primetime TV. Don't forget that there is a 3 hour time difference between the east and west coasts in the US (let alone even more time differences if you throw in Europe, Australia, etc). So, you have a pretty big window in which to pin and have those pins be seen by more followers.

Schedule the pins if you can
You might only have 20 minutes a day to pin, but you don't want all of your pins to go up at that time. Having 1 person's pins all show up in your stream at once is annoying and spammy. I will say it again: having only 1 person's pins in your stream at one time is spammy and drives followers crazy. People will unfollow you for it, you'll get kicked off of group boards for it and other bloggers will talk behind your back. It doesn't matter if you think "it works for you", it would work much better if you didn't spam.

Luckily there are quite a few services out there now for scheduling your pins. I use ViralTag, but there's also ViralWoot, Sendible, CoSchedule and Ahalogy. I try to space out my pins by at least 20 minutes, though I know this isn't always successful (in large part because I have some things scheduled out months in advance). But, pinning every 2 minutes, especially to the same board, will turn off a lot of people. It's a great way to be unfollowed.


Let people know you're on pinterest
Let people know you're on Pinterest!
Make it easy for readers on your site to find you on Pinterest. If they like you enough to read your posts, they'll probably be interested enough to find you on Pinterest. You should put a link or image near the top of your site, in an easy to find location, or use one of the Pinterest widgets to help readers find you.

If you look on my site I have a Pinterest logo in my social media links, and I currently (at least, while I'm writing this) have created a widget with pretty pictures to the right showing that I'm on Pinterest and showcasing some of my most popular boards. There is also a great Pinterest widget which creates a mini-board on your site. While it can be slow to load, I do think it helps a lot.

Getting more followers
A lot of the things I've already mentioned will help get you followers. Be interesting to follow, curating good content with eye catching pins (more on that below). Making sure the people who already follow you elsewhere know that they can follow you on Pinterest is a great step as well.

I had the chance to ask Jill Nystul (she of the million viral pins) what is her best advice for gaining Pinterest followers. She told me that she's had the best luck by running contests. Pinterest seems to have a difficult to follow policy re: having people pin something specific to enter a contest. However, I like to use Rafflecopter for anything I run as a contest on my blog, and there's an option for following on Pinterest to enter (I believe you need to pay for that option). I always use it and make it a ton of extra entries!

The best way I've found to gain followers is to pin throughout the day with interesting content, and have that content be not only your own. Have that content spaced out throughout the day, so you're getting people that are checking Pinterest before work, on their lunch hour, while watching television at night, etc. And remember that there are a lot of time zones out there! You might hit one person right as they're making dinner, but that same pin is at a good time for someone else at 8 pm on the other side of the country. That's why you want your pins spaced out!


Make your website Pinterest friendly
There are a lot of ways to make your website Pinterest friendly, and these are the ones that have been the most successful for me so far.

Add a Pin It button
Adding a button at the end of your post, or a button that hovers over an image, is a great way to make it easy for readers to pin your content. I recommend doing both if you can! I like Add This and Share This for easy sharing buttons and Pinterest has their own Pin It Button that is easy to install.

Optimize your images
Pinterest is an image driven website, and if a post doesn't have an image then it can't be pinned.

Go tall: Currently, Pinterest takes every image pinned and resizes it to a uniform width, keeping things in perspective. So, a landscape picture will end up short, but a tall image will stay tall. So, it's better to have a tall image. Note that Pinterest eventually cuts off images in the main feed, so you have a limit to which a tall image will do you any good, but tall and skinny is better and will show up more in a Pinterest feed.

Use clear images: You want an image that people can actually see. Bright is better than dark. Appropriately zoomed in is good. What works on a blog (eg, pictures of shadow swatches) doesn't really work on Pinterest. It's better to combine those into a collage, and it is better to use a max of 4-6 images if you're using full images for a "title" page.

Adding writing helps: Sometimes, not always, but yes. Adding writing can help. You can use free programs like Canva or PicMonkey if you don't own Photoshop Elements or regular Photoshop.

Add your blog name: I don't always do this, but putting your logo on an image can help a lot if the image ever gets pinned without your site being linked.

Red grabs the eye: I recently read that having red/pink tones instead of blue/green in your image will grab the eye and result in more repins. I've made images with both color schemes, and guess what? It works. The difference isn't huge, but it does change.

Have good pin descriptions
I know pinners who just put in a bunch of key words, and while this might make your pin show up in search more often, it doesn't help your followers at all. Use a few key words, but putting in a description that is helpful actually increases your repins.

Advanced tip: When putting images on your blog, make sure you fill out a good alt tag. Putting a random collection of key words isn't good (and Google frowns upon it). Instead, the alt tag should be a "description" of the image, but it is also what Pinterest will pull over as the pre-filled pin description. So, include a keyword or two, but you can also add in a clickable link to your blog or even tag yourself on Pinterest with it! I add "via @15minbeauty" (make sure you use your Pinterest user name) or "via 15MinuteBeauty.com" and they'll be automatically added to the pin description.

Don't give it all away: This goes along with images as well. The more leading your image and description, the more likely people are to click over. I've stopped making bit tutorial images for this reason. While pinners love to repin them, they don't drive traffic at all. Instead, create a great image with the end result.

Pinterest Group Board Basics and Manners
Group boards are your friend
Group boards can be an amazing way to get more exposure on Pinterest. Anyone can make a group board, when you go up to edit a board you can invite other pinners. The invited person needs to be following that board, and you need to be following at least one of their boards as well. Easy peasy lemon squeezy!

The group board followers initially are composed of the followers of the board starter, though when more pinners are added if someone "follows all boards" on those pinners, they get added as group board followers as well. The group boards can become very large, but in general the majority of the followers are still the initial core group of followers that were following the board starter. This can be great as an added pinner, chances are that most of those followers are new to you.

Common Board Rules/Manners
Because the board starter is essentially giving you free uncontrolled access to their followers many board starters will set a few rules for their boards, or they may just feel free to delete anyone they want. Personally, I watch my group boards very closely and simply delete repeat offenders. I don't leave messages for people, I don't hunt you down, I simply delete you (and I tell Pinterest to delete all of your pins to that board when I do it).

You can usually check board descriptions for information about that board's rules. However, unless otherwise stated you should probably follow these common group board rules:

Don't invite friends: I'm super picky about who I will let into my group boards. I check out blogs, go through a person's Pinterest profile and even look at their Twitter feed. Not everyone does this. Recently another blogger started inviting other bloggers from her area into my group boards, and one of those invited bloggers started spamming with ads for fake LV bags. The original blogger was deleted and banned, which means that Pinterest also booted everyone she invited AND deleted all of their pins. I definitely won't be inviting her to any of my boards again.

Don't spam the board: This is the biggest one, I can NOT emphasize this enough. Many boards will specify how many pins you can pin to it in a day (something I have a really hard time keeping track of when I schedule all of my pins), but as a general rule you shouldn't be pinning the same pin to a board more than once. And guess what? If you have 1 post with a bunch of similar pictures, you should only be pinning that post once. It will count as spamming if you pin 3 pictures that are almost identical at the same time. You should probably keep yourself under 5-10 pins total to a single group board in a day, and all of those pins need to be spread out throughout the day. I recently booted a few bloggers from group boards that over the course of months were continually pinning the same post many times in the same day (5-10 times) and followers were even mentioning it in comments! Don't be a spammer!

Stay on topic: Sometimes you hit the wrong board name and send something off topic, and that isn't a big deal. Or sometimes a board can have a generic name (hair), and it might not say it in the board description, but maybe the board starter doesn't want hair tips in that board, only pretty hair pictures. Most board starters are pretty forgiving of that. But consistently pinning something very off topic to a board can definitely get you booted. Such as the person that wouldn't stop pinning high end beauty products to my "Drugstore Beauty" board. Yes, I booted them. And the person that pinned all of their holiday beauty gift ideas to my "Summer Beauty" board.

Finding group boards
You can often find group boards just by searching on Pinterest for names such as "beauty" or "makeup" and looking for the little group board icon on the results. Also try checking the profile pages of some of your favorite pinners, chances are they belong to some amazing group boards that you'll want to follow or join!

9

Photoshop & Blogging: The Secrets Behind 15 Minute Beauty's Graphics

Nothing to Dislose

how to make collages for websites and blogs using photoshop cs3

Over the years, one of my favorite things about blogging has become image processing. Really. I love having many windows open in Photoshop. I own about 5,000 fonts, and my font twin (Kelly from Gouldylox Reviews) and I will email each other links to new (and free) fonts. I love playing with the layers, trying different colors, transparencies and trying to create a great glitter effect. Yes, I'm a computer nerd and I kind of love it!

I'm not a graphic designer, though I definitely have more skills than the average blogger. I've designed this site and done the graphics on my own for about 6 1/2 years and have designed/coded for other bloggers as well. The thing I get asked the most (other than requests for more social media buttons) is for directions on how to create my collages. Check out my Busy Mom's Makeup Kit and Martha's Must Have Beauty Essentials to see what I mean.

This tutorial is only for the advanced Photoshop user. You shouldn't be saying "what's a layer?" and "transform?" I warn you now that I have Photoshop CS3, so it is old but I find no reason to upgrade (especially now that the cloud stuff is coming), and I have never even opened a Photoshop Elements program. I don't know how things translate over and can't help you with that. But, I do expect that some of the basic concepts would be the same.

Read on if you're interested in my process....

13

Why Aren't Readers Flocking To Your Blog? Are You Guilty of These Blogging Sins?

Top 10 Reasons I Don't Read Your Beauty Blog

I get asked a lot to look at other people's blogs and tell them what is wrong, why don't they have thousands of hits a day after they've been on the internet for all of a week. (Yes, really.) Surprisingly enough, most of those blogs are committing the same deadly blogging sins over and over. I thought I'd write them all up into one place, maybe some people will take a hint (especially about the random use of capital letters) and fix some of these issues!


1. Your photography sucks
I run from blogs with bad pictures. Is everything skewed to a strange tint? Learn how to set your color balance. Or fix it in iPhoto or photoshop so it looks true to life. I don't care what that lipstick looks like if everything looks green. I've had some other bloggers (ok, really just one) play high and mighty in a blogging group and say that she considers it against her integrity to alter any pictures. Implying that the rest of us are as bad as the magazines that make celebs look flawless and 20 pounds skinnier because we corrected a lighting issue. Get off your high horse. Readers want to see what something looks like, it's why they come to a blog (because you know that the companies don't have accurate pics on their sites).


2. Your photos are too small
That tiny picture of your little swatch on your arm? I don't need to see your whole arm. And the entire picture needs to be bigger than 100px wide. Please and thank you. Please learn to crop and zoom.


3. You only post about products you LOVE or HATE
No one wants to read about you gushing over a product all the time or complaining that you didn't like the floral scent of a lotion and therefore the product is horrible... Be honest, explain what a product is like, how it worked for you and how it could have been better for you or who it would have worked better for. Those posts come across as more genuine and honest (because they are) rather than sounding like you were paid for your endorsement.


4. You aren't disclosing properly
I admit that I'm a bit of a fanatic about FTC disclosures (I was high profile about them when they were first introduced to the blogosphere thanks to a Social Media for Dummies book I was interviewed in as well as a Forbes.com article), but now it comes across as either you're too stupid to do it correctly or think you're above it. Either way, it's definitely noticeable when you only have a "c/o" label in your small print explanation of that look of the day.


5. I can't search your site
Where's your search box? Readers want to know what you thought of X, Y or Z. Let them find it more easily.


6. I can't follow you on social media
At the very least, you should have your RSS automatically going to a Twitter Feed and/or Facebook page. Even if you don't touch them, you'll be glad you set it up later when you do want to interact more. Set it up.


7. Social Media corollary.... I can't pin your images.
What is up with that? Is that picture of your eyeball or arm swatch so precious that you won't let me pin it? Slap your website on it as a watermark and let me pin it. I get about 6x more traffic from Pinterest than Google in any given month. Really, it's worth it to let someone pin.


8. You don't have a unique voice
You might love Pink Sith's blog, but she has a very unique style. Writing in the same voice as her comes across as forced and fake. Find your own voice, make it your own and develop it. Copying someone else's style, posting about the same stuff as them 1 day later... Readers catch on to those things and you'll find your blog boring to keep up with. Find what makes you unique, your own voice and perspective and work on that point of view. If I want to know what Pink Sith says, I'm going to head to her site instead of your site, she's funnier than you.


9. Your site makes my eyes bleed
All of your different tags everywhere linking to other blogs, 10 different affiliate banners and adsense blocks, that purple background with pink writing... I just can't take it! Simplify as much as you can, make your site easy to read with a nice big area for posts and put your search bar and social media buttons up top. Done. Now I can navigate and read your site and won't just close it as soon as that page loads (eventually). Oh yeah, I'm going to close the window if your site takes more than 30 seconds to load. Fix that. No one needs a musical soundtrack while they read your blog.


10. Your writing is just...bad.
I'm not being elitist here (I haven't taken an english or writing class since high school), but when you start purposefully misspelling words, mixing up their and there and throWiNg in RandOm Capital LeTtErs it makes me insane. Try to adhere to some basic grammar rules, spell check is your friend, and the capital letters should be used and used in the correct manner. If you're guilty of any of the above and are wondering why PR isn't coming to you with information on their clients, that is the answer. They would be embarrassed to send the placement to their client.


Did I miss anything? Have you been guilty of any of these issues? I'm sure we all have been guilty at one point or another, but fixing them will make your site more user friendly and I guarantee that will result in more traffic.

32

Blogging 101: What You Should Do With Press Releases


Press Releases as a Blogger
How should a blogger handle press releases? This is something that has come up a lot lately in a few blogger groups that I'm part of, and I felt like something really needed to be said. Luckily, my friend Aprill from Glitter Gloss Garbage published all of my thoughts tonight, so I'm saved from having to do it myself!

I want to say that I 100% agree with everything Aprill says. No one goes to a blog to read a press release that has been copied and pasted from an email or retyped from a paper press release (that pile in the picture is about 1/3 of the press releases currently hanging out on the floor of my mid-reorganization office). It gives you no credibility as a blogger, your readers want to hear what YOU think, not a PR rep, and really... are you just that lazy? There are bloggers that feel that publishing a press release is a favor to the PR rep. It really isn't. And they aren't fooled.

It's really very easy to get a press release and make it your own. Add an intro, reword some of the info, move things around and then add more of your own thoughts. Put together the graphics in a way that is your own and is branded to your site.

I do things like this all the time, and the result is a post like my recent post on a fresh and pretty wedding makeup look, which had info from the press release (I wasn't at that show interviewing the makeup artists, and the model images were sent to me by the PR rep), but I reworded everything, made my own images by digging for the exact colors and products used in the look and then I added my own info by adding in alternative products (some of which are faves of mine) that would help you to recreate the look. That's what my readers wanted, not what the PR rep sent. And you know what? Less than an hour after that post went up, before I could even email to let them know about it, Le Metier de Beaute emailed me to say that they loved the post.

Head over to Glitter Gloss Garbage to read more about how you should be handling press releases as a blogger, and why just reposting the info as it was sent to you is a bad idea.

4

How to Get Disclosure Buttons On Your Blog Posts Without Using Images


How to get disclosure buttons that aren't images
With the new FTC Disclosure Guidelines, bloggers are scrambling to figure out how they'll include all of the disclosures needed without making their websites look crazy. Most want to use a simple button for their disclosures, though the problem is that many of the RSS Readers, Facebook, Google Plus... they all like to grab the first image in a post for the thumbnail. (Well, Facebook sometimes grabs a random image. Often that's my facebook icon in the header.) So, how do you make a button using just html or css instead of an image? Oh, and it needs to work in Blogger.

I've taken the script from a few places, though the best one was at DevGrow, smooshed a few things together and customized/simplified to create these buttons. The buttons can go to any website you want (great for linking to your full disclosure policy), change size according to what is written in them (so you can re-type what is in them according to the disclosure you need for that post), and you can make them any color you want! Oh, and they work in Blogger. Did I mention that? (For some buttons that work in Wordpress, head over to my friend Carleen's blog, where she has Disclosure Buttons For WordPress Blogs.)

Here's a close up of the buttons:
CSS buttons

I've currently made them black, white and grey with a little gradient in them to add interest, but you can make the color any hex number, remove the gradient, make the font bold, etc.

 photo edit-html.jpg

Add this to the CSS area. It can go anywhere, but I just add it as a new section near things like "Mobile".

/* Buttons
----------------------------------------------- */
.button {
padding: 5px 10px;
display: inline;
background: #ffffff url(button.png) repeat-x bottom;
border: none;
color: #000000 ;
cursor: pointer;
font-weight: normal;
border-radius: 5px;
-moz-border-radius: 5px;
-webkit-border-radius: 5px;
}
.button:hover {
background-position: 0 -48px;
}
.button:active {
background-position: 0 top;
position: relative;
top: 1px;
padding: 6px 10px 4px;
}

.button.black { background-color: #000000; color: #ffffff;}
.button.white { background-color: #ffffff ; color: #000; }
.button.gray { background-color: #f1f0f0 ; color: #000; }


 photo customize-code.jpg
Here's where you change things up!

Add the URL of where you put this image: Download the gradient, upload it to a site like Photobucket and then put the direct image URL in. If you don't want a gradient, remove the entire url(button.png).

To change the background color of a button or the font color to any color you want, you'll need to use the hex number. You can get that from using a program like Photoshop, or you can head to Colour Lovers and play with colors until you find one you like.

 photo add-html.jpg
After a few hours of trying to get the page to display html like I could get it to display css and I gave up. But, I think it's pretty easy to see what to type. It's a normal link, but to have it show up as a button use class="button white" (or whichever color you want) in the link. Put the html where you want the buttons to show up. So, the top of a post and the bottom of a post is easiest, it's best to just add this to the post template (under settings->post) so it autopopulates in every new post without you doing anything. You can display as many buttons as you want, you can rename buttons to whatever colors you want, etc.
41

Free Social Media Buttons in Pantone Deeps

3

Free Social Media Icons: In Pantone Neutrals

Free Social Media Icons: In Pantone Neutrals
Yet another set of icons (can you tell these have been really popular and I've been getting requests?) Here are some great neutrals that will work with almost any layout!

Download the Neutral Set

Previous sets:
Free social media icons in Spring 2013 Pantone Shades
Free social media icons in Pantone Bright Colors
Free social media in Pantone Pastels


Free Social Media Icons: In Pantone Neutrals
3

Free Social Media Icons: Pantone Pastels

Free Social Media Icons: Pantone Pastels
Another set of social media icons for fashion and beauty blogging. This one is in some pretty pantone pastels for spring!

Download the Pastel Set

Previous sets:
Free social media icons in Spring 2013 Pantone Shades
Free social media icons in Pantone Bright Colors


Free Social Media Icons: Pantone Pastels
7

Free Social Media Icons: Pantone Bright Colors

Free Social Media Icons
Recently I shared a set of free social media icons for beauty and fashion bloggers, and a lot of people seemed to enjoy them! Most the requests were for bright colors, so I've created a set here. If you need a specific hex color or anything else, let me know!

Download Icons

Free Social Media Icons
8

Free Social Media Icons For Fashion and Beauty Bloggers (In Spring 2013 Pantone Colors)

free social media icons
So... I've never done anything like this for download before, but since I seem to be making these sets for a lot of blogging friends, and it seems to be so hard to find a set with the most popular icons for fashion and beauty bloggers, it seemed like it was finally time to just create a full set for download.

So, here they are, social media icons for your fashion or beauty blog, in Pantone's chosen Spring 2013 colors! Included are oldies but goodies like RSS and Facebook, but also Bloglovin' and Hello Cotton, which a lot of us use.

If you have a special icon request, love these icons and want to leave me a nice little comment, or think I should do more in the future, just leave a comment below!

DOWNLOAD HERE

Not a big surprise, I forgot the ones I don't use myself!

Both have all of the same colors.

Download Update

Another quick update, the requested Vimeo buttons! This folder includes all of the Pantone Spring 2013 colors.

Download Vimeo Buttons

free social media icons
45

Basic HTML for Bloggers: Yes, You Really Should Know This

Basic HTML for Bloggers

This isn't a "normal" beauty post today, instead this post is meant for the ladies over at the Beauty Blogging Coalition and the Beauty Blogazons. I don't expect my regular readers to need this post, but there are a surprising number (to me at least, I fully admit to being a computer nerd) of bloggers that don't know the basic html behind a blog post. HTML is actually very easy if you know the basic codes, but the key is knowing what you're looking at.


Read on if you want to decipher why those punctuation marks are doing things that you weren't taught about in your senior year composition class. I'm going to go over a few basic things that I use in my posts every day. If there are more things that you want me to go over, be sure to leave a comment and I'll do a 2nd post.
17

Beauty Blog Photography Tips: Swatching Session and Post Processing

Beauty Blog Photography Tips: Swatching Session and Post Processing
Finally! We're at the "meat" of this beauty blog photography tip series, this is how I set things up, take my pics and then process the pics afterwards.

First, I use my new infinity edge photo backdrop for most of my pics. It's an upgrade from my previous method of just draping white fabric over whatever boxes or baskets happened to be on my office floor.

Pick a room that is sunny, but with indirect sunlight. You don't want the sun directly on your swatches, you'll end up with pics full of shimmer, but it will be almost impossible to tell what the shade looks like. This is what it looked like outside on the day I took these pics. Definitely overcast, though it is still pretty bright out. This window faces west and it's about 1 pm in the middle of the winter. I recommend afternoon light, but not the "golden hour" around sunset that photographers love. It's amazing for fashion bloggers, the golden hue is beautiful in a look book pic. But, it will skew your swatch pics. Avoid it if you can!

Here's what it typically looks like when I'm taking pics of products. You can see that the backdrop is set up, products are on it, and the entire thing is facing the window. I try to keep my body a little off to the side when taking pics, or else I'll sometimes cast a little shadow over my picture. Also notice that my grey card is hanging out in the periphery of the shot, I'll talk more about it later.

I take all of my pics on the Macro setting, without flash. On my camera, the camera will automatically figure out the shutter speed and aperture, though I can change them a bit if I want. I just leave them alone. I usually take a couple of images with ISO 100, and then I'll switch to Auto-ISO and take some pics with that setting as well. I've found that 100 is usually best for getting the color as accurate as possible, but if the room is a bit dark that can cause problems. Auto-ISO usually ends up about 200-400.

I also have to confess that I'm a bit impatient, so I typically leave my camera on the continuous function. I push the button once, it takes 4-5 pics. I started doing this when I had my daughter (amazing what a difference it makes for baby pics! Happy smiling baby vs. baby looking angry or toppling over), and I just left the camera set that way when taking blog pics. I push the button, move around just slightly very slowly. I get pics at slightly different angles and sometimes there might be a shadow or reflection that I don't like. This way I'll have lots to pick from.

When taking swatch pics, I usually use my left arm. This is because I can hold and take pics with my right hand, but not my left. I can use both arms if I want to get out a tripod and remote.

I recommend using q-tips for swatching. It makes the makeup you apply to your arm less messy and when swapping between colors you can just move on to another q-tip end rather than a dirty fingertip.

My arm typically looks something like this. I try to get mostly white background and a hint of the grey card in the background, since you never know when you might need it for post-processing. Note that in this image not all of the swatches are in focus. This can be a problem when swatching a lot of shades in a row like this, I typically stick to 2-3 at the most. For swatching I move my arm around a lot, closer and further away from the camera while it snaps away. It can sometimes take a lot of pics to get one with everything in focus perfectly. As well, one pic at an angle and another straight on can be helpful to show off shimmer or a frost.


When I take pictures of makeup on myself, I frequently end up with a lot of images like this. The focus of this picture is the lippie, and that's what will be shown in the final image, but here's what the rest of it looks like.

To take pics of makeup on myself, I generally follow the tips in this Specktra post about makeup pictures. I never use flash, I always use a tripod (I somehow make my face look like it is a wonky shape otherwise), and with the tripod I always use a remote. I set my ISO to 100, I try to have the grey card off to the side somewhere if I can, and then I snap away.

I'm pretty much sitting where the backdrop was previously, facing the window, out of any direct sun. The tripod is in front of me and I've found that sometimes a few inches in either direction of where I am sitting and the tripod is sitting might mean a shadow over part of my face. So, it is a little bit of trial and error.

When taking pics of lippies, I start with the lightest shades first. I apply, take my pics, and when ready to switch to the next shade I remove with baby oil on a cotton round. I then wash the baby oil off with a face wash. I can usually take pics of a few lippies before my lips start retaining the color. Once that happens I stop swatching, I consider pics taken at that point to not be accurate.

Post-Processing
Now that you've taken a bunch of pics, you should have some pretty accurate pics to chose from. Hopefully not much of this post-processing stuff needs to be done. I start with the image that has the most accurate color representation, shows what I want and is in focus (obviously).

First, I crop out most of the extra stuff. Then I adjust to 72 dpi for the web, RGB color, and resize appropriately. I typically go 500px width max, though this will vary with your blog template. I also add my watermark. I go very subtle for my watermark, usually I pic a font (often one currently used in my blog), and in white I'll write my blog name and address. I size it to stretch across about 50% of the picture, and then I change the opacity to about 10% or so. I want it to be barely noticeable, but there if you look closely. I've found that this prevents people from stealing my pics but doesn't detract from what I'm trying to get across. Of course, I might be wrong! But, that's what I do.

To adjust the color go to the levels panel. There are a few things that you can mess around with here. The theory of what to do here is best explained in this DPS post on levels and the histogram.

1) The arrows under the histogram. Notice that they are colored, the one on the far left is black, the middle is grey and white is to the right. If you move the white one to the left a bit (usually to where the "mountain" of the histogram starts) the image will lighten. Typically that is the only triangle that I mess with.

2) If I have colors that are slightly off, I'll grab the grey eye dropper and click it on my grey card, that fixes most issues. If it doesn't fix it, I'll take the pics again another day.


Finally, saving the image! For years I didn't realize this was a vital step, but you really do need to save your image correctly. Because the web usually slightly different colors than your camera and Photoshop, you need to convert to the web colors. If you don't save the image correctly, the color will look off once you get it to your website.

So, make sure you use the "Save for the web and devices" function!
10

Beauty Blog Photography Tips: DIY Photo Infinity Edge Backdrop

diy photo cube, back ground, drop, infinity edge, table top
Recently I grew tired of my haphazard way of creating a photography background. So, last week I finally made a trip to Jo-Ann Fabrics, where for less than $20 I created the collapsible tabletop photography background you see above. It took less than 10 minutes and has made taking pics in my office (confession: usually on the floor) much easier and the results are more professional looking.

This has been a huge improvement over my DIY photo cube!
So, like a lot of people, I followed the directions that are all over the internet for creating a photobox, phototent, whatever it's called. I really thought that this would solve all of my photo problems. One place to take pics with ahhhmaaazing lighting, a nice clean background, etc. But, it didn't work like that. I couldn't get my camera to fully compensate for the inadequate lighting, despite the white box I was still getting issues with color casts (those are full spectrum light bulbs and this was despite fixing the white balance each pic session). Anyways, the point is that the box wasn't all that and a bag of chips.

I found that really, I needed sunlight. My office faces west, and gets pretty good afternoon light. I started taking pics in there, frequently on the floor, as I need to clean off my desk. I have a piece of white cloth (leftover from making black out shades for my daughter's room), and I usually end up putting it on the ground, propped up by something. Here it is draped over a basket of products I need to test. Sure, it worked, but usually there were a lot of folds and the back drop often wasn't large enough.

So, I decided to make a bigger, brighter and collapsable backdrop. I saw similar items for sale on-line, though they often weren't very portable and more often than not they were sold out.

Here's how I did it!

DIY Photography backdrop for macro shots
So, I think these directions are pretty self-explanatory. I did take the fold that I cut off and place it under the other small fold, and then I taped it there with a piece of white duct tape. White so that it would blend in with everything else. This did make the base a bit heavier, though still the center of balance is a tad off so it is best if you lean this against something (again, I'm using the same wicker basket). But, overall things are much better off as the backdrop is much straighter, taller and wider.

how to make your own white fabric photography backdrop- the results
I think these results speak for themselves. Same settings, taken in the same room, about 2 minutes apart. The ISO is set at 100 because when I took the pic on Macro in the box (taken first), the camera automatically picked it (seems like 400 would have been better). Regardless, I used the same settings on my new background, and the results were much better! The new pic is much easier to just brighten suddenly and have a great blog pic.

Best of all, the entire thing just folds up and I can easily store it away. I haven't thrown away that cube I made yet, but I probably will soon.

Let me know if you make one of these and how it works for you!

diy photo cube, back ground, drop, infinity edge, table top

10

Beauty Blog Photography Tips: Essential Equipment

beauty blog photography, photo tips, makeup pics
Believe it or not, I get a lot of questions via email about how I take pics for my blog. I didn't really think that my pics were anything special, though I do try really hard to ensure that I portray colors accurately. Sometimes that can be very difficult in the Michigan winter!

To consolidate all of my answers into one spot, I thought I'd put together a little photo series. It was meant to be a post, but I'm much too wordy for that. I'm definitely still learning about photography, especially over the last few months as I've been using my dSLR more and more for my blog. So, this is just what currently works for me, I'll publish updates if things change greatly.

Note that beauty blogging photography is different than photography for pretty any other on-line endeavor. It is very micro heavy and there is a lot more emphasis on true color depiction than other types of blog photography. If your pic of an eye shadow swatch is a bit off, I can guarantee that you will get comments and emails about it from readers!

So, while I do everything that I can to ensure true color depiction (taking pics in bright indirect sunlight, no reflections from strong colors in the room, manually setting my white balance, etc.) you'll see that I go beyond this with my grey card set and fixing things further in Photoshop.


My essential items for beauty blog photography:
1) Camera: Duh! I use a Nikon D3100, which is a great intro DSLR. I especially love that it is a bit smaller, since I have freakishly small hands for a tall girl. It has a lot of preset settings, though I do admit that I've learned a lot about how to actually use the camera so I don't use them very often.

Once you have a camera, even if it is just a $75 point and shoot, you need to know how to use it! Know how to use the micro mode especially, since most of the shots for a beauty blog are close ups. Know how to set your white balance, know what shutter speed and aperture are, etc. Know them and use them correctly.


2) Micro Lens: I use this Nikon Micro lens, which is more than enough for my blog pics, though if you want to do serious macro work isn't a great choice. About 99% of the pics on 15 Minute Beauty use this micro lens.


3) Remote! My camera doesn't use infra-red (boo!) so I'm stuck with a wired remote most of the time, though I did just buy one that works with an antenna. I feel very 1980's. If you anticipate using a remote from further than 6 feet away very often, I recommend getting a camera that uses infrared.

I use my remote for a lot of things, though most of the time it is simply because I would need to hold my hand at an awkward angle. So, I'll use my tripod and remote instead. Just this afternoon I was taking pictures of a few nail polishes. I had painted one on my left hand, another on my right hand. I simply can't hold the camera in my left hand and take pics with it, my hand doesn't work that way. So, tripod and remote (still too awkward to hit the button myself), waaaaay easier!


4) Tripods: I have a couple of tripods, and I fully admit that I simply bought the cheap options. I have a basic and pretty adjustable tripod that I bought from and ideeli sale. I also have one of those Joby Gorillapods, which look like little insects almost. The legs are very adjustable. I mostly use the Joby if I'm using a photo setup on the floor of my office, in which case the tripod is too tall.


5) Photo Editing Software: You really need to have something that allows you to resize pics, watermark them and do some basic editing. I know a lot of people that use free on-line programs. Personally, I use Photoshop. Photoshop Elements does a lot of what the full version can do, but for a lot less money.


6) Grey Card Set: I own this grey card set from Amazon, and I use it all the time. The white card is perfect for the white balance, though the other 2 cards are a bit more complicated. I'll often put the trio of cards off to the side while I take pics, and then use the little glimpse of them in the frame to correct the color and exposure. You can read more about it over on DPS.

You don't need to use these cards. They're only magic in that they are a white, black and a neutral grey. If you want to try out the technique without buying the cards, here's an image that I made which should do the same thing. Print it out on bright white paper and you're good to go! I do recommend buying the cards if you'll be doing this long term as they're more durable.


Tomorrow I'll go over the setup I use for taking pictures and I'll show you how I recently made a new photo background that's made a big difference!

3
Never miss a post
Name: 
Your email address:*
Please enter all required fields
Correct invalid entries