Hello! I'm Ken's friend, Jen...I believe we've met before. From time to time I've admired your layouts and user pictures, and I actually have two questions I'd like to ask.
[1] How did you get your comment links like that? Meaning, the number of people who have commented as an exponent-type thing of the link itself? It's nice.
[2] How on earth do you make a vector? I like the rounded-off thing you do with your pictures, and the whole look of the vector thing is really, really cool.
[1] To make the number look like an exponent, go to the Modify Journal section and put <*sup>%%messagecount%%<*/sup> in the LASTN_TALK_LINKS<= override (just make sure to take out the asterisks).
[2] To make a vector, you need a vector-making program (Adobe Illustrator, Macromedia Flash, etc.) A vector is basically made up of layers of shapes in a solid color (they kind of look like topographs if you think about it), or a gradient which is a blend of two or more colors. Another thing about vectors is that you can open up the image to any dimension you want without the image looking blurry, pixelated, or distorted (unless you decide to save it in a bitmap format--.jpg, .gif, .bmp, .png) I'm really bad at explaining things, so if you want to see a step-by-step tutorial to get a better idea as to how they work, go here. Not the best tutorial, but it'll do.
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[1] How did you get your comment links like that? Meaning, the number of people who have commented as an exponent-type thing of the link itself? It's nice.
[2] How on earth do you make a vector? I like the rounded-off thing you do with your pictures, and the whole look of the vector thing is really, really cool.
Thanks for your time!
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[1] To make the number look like an exponent, go to the Modify Journal section and put <*sup>%%messagecount%%<*/sup> in the LASTN_TALK_LINKS<= override (just make sure to take out the asterisks).
[2] To make a vector, you need a vector-making program (Adobe Illustrator, Macromedia Flash, etc.) A vector is basically made up of layers of shapes in a solid color (they kind of look like topographs if you think about it), or a gradient which is a blend of two or more colors. Another thing about vectors is that you can open up the image to any dimension you want without the image looking blurry, pixelated, or distorted (unless you decide to save it in a bitmap format--.jpg, .gif, .bmp, .png) I'm really bad at explaining things, so if you want to see a step-by-step tutorial to get a better idea as to how they work, go here. Not the best tutorial, but it'll do.
Hope I could be of some assistance!
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