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Here are posterous posts filed under copy...

jen says...

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phil needs says...

Lacoste

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phil needs says...

http://20.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_ks7zrv0z221qzvixuo1_500.jpg

“Fall All Leaves All Fall” (2009). Courtesy Ed Ruscha and Gagosian Gallery.

(via Another Something)

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phil needs says...

Simon Evans’ delicate text-based works are collaged and assembled from prosaic materials including found paper, scotch tape, pencil shavings, colored pencil and white out. They describe a world poised between two poles of earnestness and irony. With his anxieties laid bare and his wry brand of melancholy, Evans presents us with a veritable laundry list of drawings that take the form of diagrams, charts, maps, lexicons, diary entries, inventories, cosmologies and epistolary entreaties that plunge the viewer into alternate states of pathos and hope.

Simon Evans

Everything I Have, 2008
Pen, paper, scotch tape, white out

Simon Evans

Home Country, 2008-9
Paper weaving

Simon Evans

Green City, 2009
Pen, paper, scotch tape, correction fluid

(via psfk)

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Phong says...

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betancur says...

I use one sketch by Matt Jones as the base of this drawing.

As Picasso used to say: "Good artist copy; great artist steal"

I think I need to do more life drawing by my self but by now...

Sent from my iPhone

Filed under: Copy

desdemona says...

Want your tweets to be more compelling? Want to be a better writer on the social web?   Me too!

The advent of social media has opened up a wide range of opportunities for non-professional writers like me — and probably you too — to write online.  Most of us writing for websites or blogs or posting on Twitter likely aren’t trained journalists.  Even professional writers trained for print must learn to adapt their writing style to an online audience who experiences content differently than a print audience.

And social media itself has changed writing online – making it more informal and personal.  In fact, when you’re writing online these days, you’re writing not only for your audience but also for search engines and social media sites.  Add Twitter to the equation and the need to communicate with only 140 characters raises writing for the social web to a new art form.

In this post, we’ve pulled together a collection of articles with advice on writing for Twitter and the social web.  We’ve organized these articles into the following topics -  general online writing principles, writing strong headlines, writing for Twitter, and writing for search engines.

Let me know if you have any ideas or tips that have worked for you.


General Web and Social Media Writing Principles

  • How Users Read On The Web
    From Jakob Nielsen: Advice on how people read on the web compared to how they read print publications.  One difference- people don’t read on the web, they scan and this requires a different writing style vs. print.
  • How to Write for the Web
    From Knight Digital Media Center: Blogs, wikis and discussion boards dissolve the barrier between writer and reader, creating a more informal and interactive writing environment. Take advantage of this opportunity and distinguish yourself by writing in a clean, active, conversational style that will make your readers feel as comfortable reading your words as they feel when talking with a close friend. Here’s some advice on how to do this with social media.
  • From Print to Web: Tips for the Transitioning Writer
    From Web Worker Daily: The web, and its readers, demands a different kind of writing, delivered in a different way. Here are some tips and resources to help get a handle on just what kind of change is required.
  • Writing Style for Print vs. Web
    From Jakob Nielsen’s Alertbox: Nielsen’s classic advice on writing for the web compared to writing for print.
  • 10 Tips on Writing the Living Web: A List Apart
    From A List Apart:  Writing for dynamic web sites that are consulting changes (think blogs, wikis, community sites) requires a different approach than writing for static websites.  Here are 10 tips that can help with the reality of writing when things are always changing..
  • 5 Rules for Better Web Writing
    From Mashable: Josh Catone provides 5 rules to be a better writer on the web from “knowing your objective” to “knowing your audience” to “keeping it short” to “making it scannable” to “embracing constraints.”

Writing Strong Headlines and Titles

Writing for Twitter

  • Copywriting for Twitter: 10 ways to make every tweet count
    From Econsultancy: With a massive amount of tweets posted every second, here’s some advice for making sure your tweets are heard through all the noise.
  • Everything I Need to Know About Twitter I Learned in J School
    From Mashable: Anne Handley, Editor in Chief of MarketingProfs does a fantastic job of showing how the tenets of good journalism can be applied to writing effectively for Twitter- from “making every word count” to “keeping it simple” to “providing context” and more.
  • How to Write a Twitter-Worthy Headline
    From SmartBlog On Social Media: Andy Sernovitz serves up his tips on writing strong Twitter headlines that will be re-tweeted- from “telling the complete story in the headline” to “using copywriter tricks – compelling terms like ‘how-to’ and ‘3 tips’ that will help get your tweets forwarded” and more.
  • 15 Kick-Ass Retweet Tips for Writers
    From Econsultancy: Some suggested techniques that writers and bloggers – not to mention traditional journalists – can adopt to improve the retweetability of their articles – from using “awesome adjectives” to “leaving a little extra space for the retweeter to append the tweet with a comment” and more.
  • An Unofficial Twitter Style Guide
    From Grammar Girl: Tips for better Twitter postings.
  • How to get ReTweeted – The Formula
    From Twitips: In this post Louise Doherty (@louisedoherty) shares a formula to help you increase the chances of being ReTweeted.
  • 6 Ways to Maximize the Use of Your 140 Characters
    From Twitips: Mark Fulton provides some tips for making the most of those few characters you get to use when using Twitter (140 to be exact).
  • How to write Twitter-friendly Headlines
    From Brian Armsey: A few tips on Twitter-optimized headline writing.
  • The Art of Writing Great Twitter Headlines
    From Copyblogger: Advice from Brian Clark on writing compelling headlines on Twitter from headlines. One piece of advice – craft headlines that promise readers a compelling reward by offering something “useful to the reader” or providing readers with a “sense of urgency.”

Writing for Search Engines

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Ingenius says...

These Seski Spam buttons feature the now seen as funny mangled subject lines from porn-site spam.

The buttons raise funds for SEICUS (Sexuality Information & Education Council of the United States) - There's a mouthful.

Great, simple idea. Much better than a classic boring social ad campaign trying to scare us by showing what kind of freak perverts we could become thanks to technology or something.

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Mike says...

via tweetie

Oops.

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