
Archive | March 2017
Review: Fat Girl, Skinny by Amye Archer

Review: Fat Girl, Skinny by Amye Archer
My review of this book follows the authors’ blurb found on Amazon.
“After her husband leaves her for a skinnier, blonder, younger woman, Amye is forced to confront the food addiction that has been holding her back for most of her life and has left her weighing two hundred and sixty-five pounds. With the help of the gang of girls of Weight Watchers, and their fearless leader —former fatty and community college dropout—Pantsuit Pam, Amye spends the next year losing weight and learning to live in a skinny (er) woman’s body. Only being skinny is not as easy as it looks, especially when inside, she will always be a fat girl. Fat Girl, Skinny is Amye’s story, but it’s also the story of anyone who has ever been told: “You’d be pretty…if”.”
Not only has Archer written a book dealing with issues of obesity, she has woven a book encompassing her own inner thoughts and feelings, and leads the reader into the feelings of others in similar situations. Food addiction is real in the western world, and with it comes extreme self-loathing and food disorders, such as bulimia, and starvation. Archer bares her soul on her journey to rebuild her life, to believe in herself once again, to lay open her bullied younger self, along with coping mechanisms of alcohol and boys. Food addiction is a vicious cycle in trying to attain metabolic sobriety, and it undermines attempts at gaining this sobriety. For memoir lovers, this is a great memoir full of honesty and deep with humanity. Heads up: this memoir contains sexually explicit scenes.
Although acquaintances may be many…

Wednesday, July 3, 2002
Although acquaintances may be many, and true friends they may be
few, counted on one hand are good folk like you.
A true friend will visit often to say hello,
but will always take the precious time,
to say hello, with a carefully crafted rhyme.
Rhyme, whether a cheer or just to say hello,
comes from not just fingers and a mind,
but requires a certain heart, which is kind.
When our mail is opened, which contains,
a rhyme no matter to what it may or does not speak,
these are the friends in need whom we seek and want to keep.
–The Faerie Keeper aka Denny Lancaster (A True Friend)
Scaling Up My Amazon Ads
Source: Scaling Up My Amazon Ads
Freehand Selection Misting Tutorial for Paint Shop Pro

Many individuals have asked me about a Freehand Selection misting tutorial for Paint Shop Pro and so I created one this morning. You must have a basic understanding of Paint Shop Pro to do this three step tutorial. Note: Photoshop works differently so please only use this with PSP.
I may write a PS tutorial another day, since I use both programs.
Misted tubes are nice to have for many reasons, especially blended designs, and they are best when they have clean edges all around them. For instance, I created a blend for the front cover of my award winning memoir, When Angels Fly. What can I say? I did use a blend and I’m an author so why not plug my memoir in this blog post as well. As you can see below, my son’s image is misted perfectly so that the mountains of Glacier National Park are visible as well as Lake McDonald (I took this photograph).

I suggest you NOT use a mask for misting. Successful misting comes with practice and it is very easy to learn. More on this as you work through this tutorial. This is a THREE Step tutorial © Mary Schmidt 17 March 2017
1. Open a new image, Edit, Copy, Paste as a New Image, and close original image. Go to Image, Resize, and resize so that the longest sides are 1000 px. This is KEY when misting. What works for a 1000 px longest side image doesn’t work for a 600 px or 300 px, etc. Those variables are the ones that you need to master, and you will. More on that shortly – in step 2.

2. Layers, Promote Background layer. Next go to your Freehand Selection tool and choose Feather of 60. Note: This is where most people have difficulty. Feather of 60 is fine for a 1000 px longest side image, IF this image has major white in the background. You MUST adjust this number for the the image you are using. I suggest you resize your images to 1000 px longest side and use this tutorial until your ready to take on other sizes and work to find the right size for that particular image. Draw a freehand selection around the part of the image you wish to mist. Note: It doesn’t have to be a circle or an oval. Be creative. Note: Look at your image and see where your marching ants are placed. If you have ants on the edge of your image then do Selections, Select None, then draw out your freehand area until you have Zero marching ants touching any side of this graphic. See my ants below. Once you have this worked out, proceed to step 3.

3. Choose Selections, Invert and hit the Delete key on your keyboard. Choose Selections, Select None. You now have a perfect misted image with Clean Edges. Save as a .pspimage or .png. Look at mine below. I added a new layer, flood filled it with green and arranged/sent it to the bottom. I wanted you to see that the edges are clean, and no part of the original edge is noted. This is what makes for a great mist. A lot of practice will make you a pro! As you learn how much you need to select for different images, make notes so that you have a idea of where to start on each successive image. Write down the largest side of your image and your final feather amount for use in the future.

Sincerely,
Mary Schmidt
https://whenangelsfly.wordpress.com
When Angels Fly ~ http://tinyurl.com/nzncr7b
Book Trailer ~ https://youtu.be/2yFT_kOntRE
https://www.facebook.com/MMSchmidtAuthorGDDonley
https://twitter.com/MaryLSchmidt
http://mschmidtartwork.deviantart.com/
Want to know why you need to leave a review?
Do you know why this is important?
I mean really important?
It helps a writer? Yes, of course. But there is more to it than that.
When we eat out, we leave the wait staff a tip. Even if the service is lousy, we leave a tip. Might be small, but we leave something behind. The staff worked hard to provide the meal, and our tip our acknowledgment. We may never return to that restaurant again, but that’s okay.
The same thing holds true for a book. The author works hard to produce a product for readers to enjoy. Some will enjoy the story more than others, but everyone should leave behind a tip (review.) Short and sweet, or long and eloquent, leave a review it doesn’t matter.
Don’t know what to say? Here’s a tip: read what others have said and to get ideas, to prime your thoughts into your…
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Do you remember?
Meaningful and powerful…. real life…. sadly.

You said I would never be anything, do you remember?
You said my reflection from my small mirror was a million times better, do you remember?
You screamed at me every time I tried to smile, do you remember?
You dragged me by my dress, do you remember?
You let him rip my heart right out, do you remember?
You called me names…
You made me a slave in that house…
You let him undress me to bare bones…
You spit in my face…
I was helpless
I was powerless
I was defenseless
I couldn’t even run
I stayed.
Do you remember?
You asked me to die
You asked me to disappear
Do you remember?
You compared me to a pig
You compared me to a dumpster
I begged you to love me a little..
I begged you to forgive me for nothing..
I begged you to allow me to…
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DRM or Not for Amazon
When you load your book up to Amazon you will get to choose whether or not to enable Digital Rights Management.

It is important to note here that this particular choice cannot be undone. Short of unpublishing and republishing this cannot be changed. Once you have some nice reviews and lots of sales on any particular book unpublishing it is not a great idea, so give some thought to this before setting it in stone. So, what is DRM?
Amazon says that Digital Rights Management “is intended to inhibit unauthorized access to or copying of digital content files”. While this sounds great in terms of combating piracy, in reality it’s about as effective in this regard as a straw hut would be at keeping you dry in a hurricane. My African Me & Satellite TV was published with DRM enabled and it is my most pirated book. Stripping DRM is…
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6 Ways to Transition Out of Writer’s Block
by Kathryn
Writer’s Block
The condition of being unable to think of what to write or how to proceed with writing it.
Also known as: every writer’s worst nightmare.
And let’s be real, it happens to everyone. Even the best writers in the world get stuck sometimes.
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I Will Have Played My Part
I love this!
