Writers: here are ten free and easy ways to add a dash of visual interest to your blog posts without resorting to AI imagery (which signals to readers that your blog post is probably also AI and there’s no need to bother reading it):

1) A thoughtful photo you’ve taken yourself — a nice sunrise you saw, a cool angle spotted on vacation, your pet curled up on the couch, flowers. Play with your phone photo app’s filter settings to nail the tone. It doesn’t need to be particularly related to the post, it’s related to you as a person.

2) An image from Wikimedia Commons that’s somehow related to the subject matter — there are unfathomably many, you can search by keyword. Remember to credit. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Main_Page

3) A screenshot of a scene you made in a sandbox game such as Minecraft or Animal Crossing

4) A scene you made with toys such as Lego (you can also use free Lego design software such as Bricklink Studio) https://www.bricklink.com/v3/studio/main.page

5) Play with the effects in whatever image editor you have access to, using your own photos or free-to-use images, to create something a bit abstract and avant-garde

6) Even if you can’t draw or paint very well, you can probably make some pretty cool abstract or collage imagery with whatever art supplies you have around. Dampen some paper and randomly dip watercolor paint onto it and see what happens

7) Those stickers you stashed and never used? Yeah you can make something with them. If they’re individually cut, you don’t even need to peel them, you’ll still find the One True Way to use them one day, I’m sure

8) Shelfies. None will dare question your competence after they see you have a real paper copy of Subject Matter Tome Volumes 1 through 6

9) You can get a lot of mileage out of compositing pre-made video game assets into an image. A good place to start is Kenney’s free and generously licensed 2D assets: https://www.kenney.nl/assets/category:2D and the Tiled editor which is specifically meant for assembling images out of video game asset tile sheets https://www.mapeditor.org

10) the most ridiculously amateurish thing you can scribble on a post-it note or in MS Paint is preferable to AI imagery because it clearly signals a real human cares about the post.

#writing #writingcommunity #collage #blog

@0xabad1dea as I wanted to have a digital garden (where unfinished notes are published as well), I left out the image and I'm now using a unique colour that gets calculated based on the URL which I then apply to the whole page. This way notes are unique as well and can be easily differentiated.
I think the library for that even checks for words, so i.e. "plants" would result in a green or brown.

@ChristianKrebel @0xabad1dea
> a digital garden (where unfinished notes are published as well)

Now that's an interesting idea, a digital scrubland.

I tried (and am still trying) to get some sort of notes/blog of various subjects that interest me and could interest others, but either I'm spending too much time writing (and never publishing) a properly structured blog article that 10 people will read, or I'm cleaning and elaborating what are supposed to be raw notes because someone else might read it. And in the end I publish almost nothing because I don't want to waste time on that.

I should try to go all in with unfinished, out-of-context, random, disorganized notes.

@0xSim @0xabad1dea yes, that sounds exactly like it would be the solution to that 😄
If you need inspiration, @maggie has great content about it: https://maggieappleton.com/garden-history
A Brief History & Ethos of the Digital Garden

A newly revived philosophy for publishing personal knowledge on the web