louispsds-blog
louispsds-blog
photoshop
931 posts
Elizabeth/mimi; photoshop resources. my psds, icons, headers and previews will be found here.
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
louispsds-blog · 9 years ago
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New psd #01. please, reblog/like if you download. you might need to adjust some layers. do not redistribute or claim as yours. [download]
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louispsds-blog · 9 years ago
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im bacccccck
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louispsds-blog · 9 years ago
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psd #108. please, reblog/like if you download. you might need to adjust some layers. do not redistribute or claim as yours. [download]
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louispsds-blog · 9 years ago
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Opia by lethiiferous
preview » code
includes:
post widths: 300px, 350px, 400px, 500px
50px x 50px avatar
3 custom links
show captions option
show avatar option
lazy load option
notes:
pixel union script by @shythemes
photo resize script by @excolo
please like or reblog if using. if you encounter any problems, contact me.
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louispsds-blog · 10 years ago
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CENT SEIZE; ABELSCOLORING (mf)
Like or reblog if you’re using/download it. It’s important to me to know that you guys are enjoying my stuff. I’m starting a “new era” of abelscoloring and i hope you like it. I love you; don’t forget the f*cking notes. Bye!
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louispsds-blog · 10 years ago
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psd #107. please, reblog/like if you download. you might need to adjust some layers. do not redistribute or claim as yours. [download]
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louispsds-blog · 10 years ago
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Effort & Interest by Chloe Themes     └ preview + full features | code
about:
a simple contained theme with sliding tabs (description / contact / navi etc) and 8 custom links. 7 post width options or 2 columns, many font options, 3 pagination display options and optional captions and tags.
notes:
for manual load to work both manual load and infinite scroll must be enabled
post widths are only customisable with one column
named after a poem by @afadthatlastsforever
video resizing script by @shythemes
features my new credit, designed by @surfeau
please like or reblog if you consider using
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louispsds-blog · 10 years ago
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psd number 226 by cabaretpsds.
don’t repost or claim as your own  - likes or reblog if u download - any doubts or problems problems talk to me in the ask - download psd
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louispsds-blog · 10 years ago
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PSD FILE NUMBER #110 NOTHINGPS. Feel free to adjust or delete some layers, Don’t redistribute or claim as your own, respect our WORK; More psds here and request morehere! Like or reblog this post if you dl this. Thank you and enjoy! download
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louispsds-blog · 10 years ago
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PSD33 MADE BY REIGNCOLORINGS. THIS PSDS ARE TOTALLY FREE, SO PLEASE RESPECT MY WORK, REBLOG/LIKE THIS POST IF DOWNLOADING, LIKES INSPIRE ME TO MAKE MORE. DON’T REDISTRIBUTE OR CLAIM AS YOUR OWN AND ADJUST THE LAYERS OR ADD AN ADJUSTMENT IF YOU NEED. (DL) 
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louispsds-blog · 10 years ago
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PSD FILE NUMBER #094 NOTHINGPS. Feel free to adjust or delete some layers, Don’t redistribute or claim as your own, respect our WORK; More psds here and request more here! Like or reblog this post if you dl this. Thank you and enjoy!!! download
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louispsds-blog · 10 years ago
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psd #106. please, reblog/like if you download. you might need to adjust some layers. do not redistribute or claim as yours. [download]
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louispsds-blog · 10 years ago
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Code Cologne made by rosewillians - preview | code Contain: 250px post size; appearence; captions option; hover tags; hover links Rules - Don’t copy; don’t move or memove the credits; like or reblog if you using; don’t use a base for your own themes. Any questions: ASK. Thank u and enjoy. More themes here!
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louispsds-blog · 10 years ago
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Do you have an advice for an aspiring writer?
If you’re aspiring to be a published author, I’m not the person to ask. I’ve been published very rarely, in extremely limited circulations of zines and low-budget university papers, and never for writing fiction. 
If you mean just that you’d like general advice on things I learned the hard way through ten million drafts until I was actually satisfied with something I wrote, then, sure. Plenty.
To begin with, I think the best advice is to take writing advice with a grain of salt, actually. There are a lot of blogs and forums and stuff, but in my experience a lot of writing advice is produced specifically to mystify and obfuscate the writing process so that “writers” can maintain elitist status. Sometimes their advice is interesting, but a lot of it is also smug self-aggrandizing nonsense. With that said, some of what follows is certain to be smug self-aggrandizing nonsense and you should take it with a grain of salt. 
Technical proficiency: You are communicating a story. Some forms of grammar and punctuation are, tragically, indispensable to that. Full sentences, full stops, commas and apostrophes do tend to contribute to others’ understanding of your writing. This may seem obvious, but it’s worth thinking about how English exists in heaps of different dialects with conflicting conventions, so you do have to pay attention to the ways you use it when you’re trying to communicate a story. This all seems very obvious, no doubt, but here’s the really cool bit: you can break these rules whenever it works best for you. Dialogue? Almost never has proper sentence structure or grammar. Informal first-person storytelling? Sentence fragments! Everywhere! You see what I mean? Technical proficiency and clarity of expression are important but they do not, necessarily, have to overshadow style and expression; they serve a purpose and as long as that purpose is fulfilled you can do whatever the hell you want. 
The dubious likelihood and value of originality: Tropes and cliches are amazing fun to mess around with, play straight, mix up or subvert completely. Derivative is not necessarily bad. Some amazing stories are pretty damned derivative. In the west, people steal from Shakespeare and the Bible all the time, for example. And those two are themselves both derivative in their ways, although it’s somewhat harder to tell were certain ideas have come from because they’ve been cobbled together in a pre-modern-literacy society from a number of different superstitious and mythological sources and so forth. The point I’m making is: there is absolutely nothing to be ashamed of in writing something that is not perfectly original. It’s never going to be, anyway: you’re formed by the same society that produced these stories and I have no idea what people are expecting when they ask for “originality”. Pull ideas from everything, hammer them together, and climb to the top of your patchwork mountain to survey the possibilities. (This is not, of course, an endorsement of actual direct plagiarism. Nah, son.)
Characters: Hurt them. Instinct is to cosset your favourite babies and make them awesome and give them awesome things and – shh. Stop. Make them struggle. Rewards are more satisfying when the character has to sweat and bleed and maybe lose a limb or two to get them. I don’t think I can stress this enough, really. Make them hurt.
Writing from experience: Write what you know is a common maxim that I think’s vastly misapplied. People seem to think it means that you should write stories from direct and specific experiences. An example of that would be: “You’re a university student? Write about university life!” And mostly that’s pretty silly. Can you imagine how very many stories would exist about boring office jobs? Yeah. Yeah. I think there’s a better, less literal, way to interpret that: Write with reference to your own experiences, rather than literally of your own experiences. For example, if you’re writing about somebody under attack, think about occasions upon which you’ve experienced the same broad emotional spectrum of panic, danger and fear – been in an accident where you got hurt? Had one of those awful street-crossing moments when you were nearly hit by a car? Fallen off something high? That immediate sense of danger and panic is going to be really useful to you in explaining how your character under attack feels. Go back there. What was it like? Can’t remember all of it? A bit blurry? Good – it was confusing. Started shaking? Good – adrenalin does that. Seemed fine until you had time to think about it and then flipped? Great – that’s psychological shock. And so on. Tug on your own feelings and responses and extrapolate from them.
Feedback: people are going to give you conflicting feedback and they are going to give it to you while being enormous entitled dicks. You don’t necessarily need very thick skin, but you might need to determine which feedback you accept and which you think is a pile of rotting testicles. It’s possible that you could only accept feedback from readers whose writing you admire, those you know personally, or those with whom you share tastes and opinions more generally. It’s very, very important to remember that people want very different things from stories and what you want may not be what a lot of your readers want. This is not your fault and it is not your problem. Your writing cannot be everything to everybody.
Don’t let anybody tell you what, why, or how, to write: Ultimately, just remember that these are words you made, a story you wrote, a thing that came from you and filtered through to other people through you. This is your space. It’s your thing. Accepting or seeking out advice is one thing, but I think that when critique comes in, you definitely have to stand tall or you’re gonna get walked all over. It feels, and often seems to outsiders, very arrogant – who are you to reject other people’s well-meant criticism of your work? (Especially if you end up writing fanfiction and can’t be seen as the final arbiter of character decisions and what’s canon “fact”.) Well, you’re the writer. It’s yours. You made it. It’s your writing. It’s your decision. It’s hard work and it can be tremendously frustrating sometimes. But when you have written something, it is in your voice. Don’t apologise. You have no need to. Don’t retreat.  Nail your goddamn colours to the mast. 
Good luck, Anon. :)
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louispsds-blog · 10 years ago
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PSD #109 by SPRINGDASH
Please, in respect to my work, like or reblog if you download. Don’t repost and don’t say that you did it. You can always adjust some layers if you need. Enjoy, babe! [dl]
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louispsds-blog · 10 years ago
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♡ Send me a ship and I’ll tell you
Who accidentally pushes a door instead of pulling/vice versa
Who doodles little hearts all over the desk with their initials inside them
Who starts the tickle fights
Who starts the pillow fights
Who falls asleep last, watching the other with a small affectionate smile
Who mistakes salt for sugar
Who lets the microwave play the loud beeping sound at 1am in the morning
Who comes up with cheesy pick up lines
Who rearranges the bookshelf in alphabetical order
Who licks the spoon when they’re baking brownies
Who buys candles for dinners even though there’s no special occasion
Who draws little tattoos on the other with a pen
Who comes home with a new souvenir magnet every time they go on vacation
Who convinces the other to fill out those couple surveys in the back of magazines
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louispsds-blog · 10 years ago
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cambriolage
a simple header theme made by ciralism to match this page
live preview | pastebin
I’m back from France and for some reason I’m sticking with the french names for crimes as theme titles…the first one is a song and then it just snowballed. Decided to take a break from custom themes to finish up this baby - it’s been in my drafts for weeks. Features include:
6 options for post size (300px - 550px)
circular header icon
5 custom links
quote and source in header
description in header (can be as long or short as you’d like)
optional like and reblog buttons
optional via and source buttons
option to hide/show captions on index page
option to hide/show tags on index page
7 customizable colors
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