Posts Tagged ‘album design tips’

Special consideration for Folded Pano Zook Books

Monday, June 13th, 2011

By now you’re probably aware that the folded panorama Zook Book is here. It’s an option many of our customers have wanted for quite some time and we are happy to be able to fulfill that demand. There are, however, special considerations to take into account when preparing a folded pano album.

We strongly encourage you to begin and end your album with full panorama designs if you plan to select the folded pano option. For construction purposes, it is necessary that all pages be full pano spreads. If you begin and/or end with a half pano, we will add a photo black blank opposite your design image. All folded pano albums will open to a black fabric moiré left and right sides, then a blank spread of epic black material left and right, then  your design begins on the following spread.†

There are no changes to the split pano album. You may still begin or end your album either with a half pano mounted facing epic black, or with a full pano spread with an extra, epic black spread preceding it (or following it for last page). Split pano albums also maintain the ability to strip out and replace up to six half panos for repair.

Folded pano Zook Books are available in all sizes up to 12×12 on print-to-bind orders only.

† The epic black page is required on all albums to be mounted back-to-back with the fabric moiré. If photographs were mounted backing up the fabric moiré, the page would likely warp over time.

Designing Your Own Album

Monday, April 25th, 2011

Zookbinders’ Ten Tips for Designing Your Own Albums

For several months we’ve been sharing with you how much easier your life can be and how much more money you can make by utilizing zookie pro, Zookbinders’ new album design and fulfillment service. We of course realize that some of you, whether new to the industry or with many years of experience, do enjoy designing albums yourself. To help ensure you are creating the best possible album for your clients, we’ve put together our top ten design tips. These tips are primarily for flush or collage style albums but would work for matted albums too.

  1. Shoot for the Album. Think about the album as you photograph your event. Be sure to create background images, images that will compliment one another on a page and that tell a story together.
  2. Streamline Your Workflow. If you want to enjoy your album designing, you need to be efficient. If you use Photoshop, use templates and learn short cuts so you can design quickly and make easy modifications. If you are uncomfortable with Photoshop, find a design solution that you do enjoy and is easy to use. There are many options out there and most have free trials.
  3. Organize Your Images. Whether you select the album images or let your client, start your album design by grouping images in separate folders for each page spread.
  4. Keep it Simple. The best designs are simple and let the images take center stage. Avoid needless or too many embellishments, use graphical elements that enhance the theme of the event or layout and that don’t detract from it.
  5. Use a Feature Image. Page layouts with a key image, designed larger on the page, complimented with a series of smaller images is much more interesting that a page with all the images the same size.
  6. Use Negative Space. Just because you have a 12×24 canvas in front of you doesn’t mean you have to fill every square inch. Negative space can be as important to your images in your final design.
  7. Set a Theme. A theme can be the color of your backgrounds and borders, whether or not you use background images or any number of design elements that create a cohesive look to your page layouts.
  8. Selectively Use Color and Black & White. You and some of your clients may prefer all color or all B&W image layouts. To add impact, use these design choices to add drama and emphasis. Imagine how much a color image would pop off the page if it was surrounded by B&W images.
  9. Know When to Break the Rules. Variety is the spice of life.
  10. Post and Promote. Once your layout is approved by your client, post the layout to your blog or Facebook page. Album layouts not only show off your design skills but your photography and ability to tell a story. It’s a great promotional tool.

For those of you who have taken the zookie pro test drive and seen the power of our customized shopping cart, please note that we will be making this cart available to all Zookbinders’ clients later this year when we launch our new ordering system to replace ROES. With this new system, you’ll be able to upload your page spreads and have us create a digital flip book and custom shopping cart for your clients to view their album. They will be able to suggest changes, place their order for their main album and add parent books and framed page spreads to the order as well. Stay tuned for more information as we get closer to our launch date.

Album Design: Taking Cues from the Design Industry

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

In today’s wedding market, those who are succeeding are putting service first.  With today’s digital albums, offering a comprehensive design service is very important. In taking cues from designers in the interior design field, we can become better album designers and create stunning and personally customized albums for our  clients.

So how do you figure out how to design the best album for your client? Observe, ask and listen. Pretty simple when you think about it, but so few do this. Observe: Look at your client’s wedding. What colors did they use? What style theme flowed through their day? What is in style in the world around us? This can be in weddings, fashion, automobiles and even make-up. All of these influences can help you find a style that suits your client.

Ask questions:  Again easy but often overlooked. What is your client’s favorite color? What format book would they like? Square, vertical, horizontal. What are their design sensibilities? Sleek, elegant, organic, trendy, traditional?

By gathering your research and listening to and noting your client’s responses, you’ll be able to guide them through the design process and suggest the best options to help them get truly excited about thier album.

In this new age, we have found that  couples hiring professional photographers are looking for your professional help and service. They respect your expert opinion and want to be guided through the design process.  They also want to be wowed, and to wow them, you need to know what interests and excites them. This is where taking some cues from the interior design field can help you be more aware of design trends as well as your clients design interests.

Tips for Better Album Covers

Friday, April 9th, 2010

Designing an album cover can be the more challenging part of designing any album including various Zookbinders albums. This is because pages and page spreads have a set dimension, but covers can vary depending on the number of pages – which influences the spine width – and the type of cover.

Leather Cameo Covers

Your only design issues with cameo photos on any leather cover is the size of your cameo. When designing your cover in ROES, the size of album you select will activate the cameo sizes available for that specific cover. Please remember an 1/8 inch will be trimmed off each edge of the print before it is adhered to the cover and the color of the liner around your cover cameo will match that of the inscription you select.

Reflectionz and Leather Spine Covers

These are our most popular image covers. They offer the contemporary look of a full bleed image on the front cover with the elegance of leather on the spine and back cover. When creating your cover image for these albums please remember the following measurements: Reflectionz Album Covers = Subtract 2 inches from the width of the book (if you are making a 10×10 album, the cover image will be an 8×10 vertical image). Leather Spine PhotoBook Plus Covers = subtract 1.5 inches from the width of the book. We also recommend that all text is 1/2 of an inch away from the edge.

Photowrap Covers

When creating your photowrap for PhotoBook and PhotoBook Plus covers, using accurate measurements is critical to having your cover images and text line up properly. We have created the following chart to give you your overal canvas size based on your cover size and number of page inserts. 2010 Cover Specs

Once you have your canvas size set, drag guide lines 3/4 of an inch in from each outer edge. Then, from the left guide line, come in the width of your cover (for a 10×10 album come in 10 inches, for an 8×12 album come in 8 inches) and set another guide line there. Now do the same from the far right guide line. Now, from each of these inner guide lines set another guide line 1/2 inch in toward the center of the cover. The remaining gap between these two sets of double lines will be your spine. For more details see our previous article.

Remember that for photowrap covers you will need to design new covers for each sized book you create as these cover files do not proportionally shrink like the pages do because of the 3/4 outter margin and spine width.

ROES Do’s and Don’ts

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

Our staff works on thousands of books and albums per year. To help you eliminate problems with your orders, they have offered up these tips to help your orders flow through our facility more smoothly.

DO: Please always enter a customer reference in ROES or on your order forms. When you have multiple orders in house and don’t have an order number, a reference name makes it easier to identify the order. For Zook Books, Matted and PhotoBook Plus albums, you’ll enter the reference name in the Options diablog box. For PhotoBook only orders, you’ll enter the reference under Review Order.

custname

DO: Add your account number in ROES. With your first order, test prints or an album, you need to fill in all of your contact info in My Information and type ‘new’ for your customer number. Once you’ve established your account with Zookbinders and your account number is issued, please update your My Information dialog box with your account number.

custinfo

DON’T: Grammatically it is inappropriate to add st, nd, rd or th after the date in album titles. You’d be amazed at how often we see ‘June 23rd, 2009’ when it should simply be ‘23 June, 2009’ or ‘June 23, 2009.’

SORRY YOU CAN’T: Currently, in ROES, you are unable to order multiple copies of a PhotoBook Plus, Zook Book or Matted Album. Only PhotoBooks can be ordered in packages or with multiple copies. If you need to order multiple copies of an identical PhotoBook Plus, Zook Book or Matted Album, first create and Add to Order all of your pages and cover. Then go to Open and Save>Save this Incomplete Order and save to your desktop or dedicated folder. Close ROES and reopen. Click Open and Save>Open an Incomplete Order then click Review Order. Review and initial the order click Complete Order. Close ROES and reopen for the following album(s) adjusting the size or cover as needed.

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