Thursday, July 2, 2009

Blog Changes and More News


I've been tweeking Blog a bit over the last month, trying to add various features as well as fiddling with the layout. My goal is to have something easy to read that has the tools you need to find things but that isn't cluttered.

There are two search boxes on Blog. The upper left hand corner search box looks for things on Blog (and nowhere else) that I've written. I'm aware that once blog entries are pushed off the front page to earlier pages that many folks can't find things. That's where this box comes in. Each blog entry I write is carefully keyworded with the name of the project, the designer, if it's about shop news or newsletters, about a stitching exhibit or the TNNA trade shows, whether it covers beads or is about a new thread from a certain manufacturer or a new stitch I'm trying. Search on these things and see what comes up when you can't find what you want or if you are interested in seeing what I've written (if anything) on that topic. Treat this search box as a treasure hunt and see what you can find!

The other search box is in the left hand column about halfway down the page. This is a new search tool Google (which owns Blogspot) offers. It is called a "custom search" and I had to enter common keywords in setting it up. I think it is supposed to weed out topics not related to NP in any Internet searches you do. I am not sure how well it works since the site gets a fraction of a cent any time it is used and I consider it unethical for me to test it but you might want to give it a try. I've noticed that searches on "needlepoint" using Google are less and less useful these days. I get a lot of eBay sales and a lot of results from sites that are just lists of keywords and ads which try to get you to their location where they hope you'll click on an ad and bring them revenue. I hope this special custom search box will avoid some of those problems! I'd appreciate feedback on how well this works if you test it yourself.

Microsoft has a new search engine called Bing which I've had fun using. Got to www.bing.com and enter various terms and see what you find. I like to choose Images to get pictures as my search result and then to add designer names to find stitched examples of someone's work. This morning I used "needlepoint Leigh Designs" to find all sorts of wonderful Leigh needlepoint canvases, stitched and unstitched, along with articles about folks who stitch her things.

I need to go through the blog listing again and remove blogs that don't post often and add those that do. The list is automatic and is generated from the list of blogs I follow but the system has problems. Not every blog I watch is shown (I removed the non-NP blogs manually) when it updates. Some blogs don't have RSS feeds enabled so they can't be followed on blog readers and via automated blog lists. If you have a blog about NP and post often but it doesn't show up on my list, email me at chillyhollow athot maildotcom and I'll try to add it. No guarantees, though. Blog occasionally flat refuses to do what I want it to. Hummm..... Sounds like the dogs, my husband, my boss and many other things in my life. LOL

In the Other News catagory, Amy Bunger's July e-newsletter is up and it is fabulous! Amy's written a fascinating article about how to choose the right color of thread when you are stitching with beads and there is a full report (with pictures!) of the Amy Bunger shop's visit to the Columbus trade show in June. Amy's also stitched two wonderful pieces, one a Halloween Boo! sign that you have to see and the other a fabulous donkey for the Kelly Clark Nativity set that is part of her shop's monthly club for this year.
http://www.amybunger.com/current_enewsletters.html

Have fun reading the newsletter. All of the Amy Bunger monthly newsletters are great but the beading tips in this one and the report on what the TNNA trade shows are like is a must-read. And there are pictures of some of our favorite designers! If you ever wondered what the real Maggie behind the Maggie Designs line looks like....

Written by Jane/Chilly Hollow
Blogging at http://chillyhollownp.blogspot.com
Archived Yahoo 360 postings at http://profiles.yahoo.com/chillyhollow

9 comments:

Terry said...

I've been trying out Bing also. There was an article about it in USA Today....Today!

The Chilly Hollow Needlepoint Adventure said...

LOL

Great minds think alike....

ChitownStitcher said...

Did you catch the picture of Amy Bunger stitching with her floor stand in the passenger seat of the car? Now that is dedication!! I stitch, but I've never taken my floor stand to use in the car.

NCPat said...

I have been trying out Bing as well. I also need to change up the blog....one of these days right after I get the camera done for the deadline maybe!

The Chilly Hollow Needlepoint Adventure said...

I like Bing, but not as a general search engine. Supposedly it is focused on travel, health and shopping. I like it for image searches mostly. It does images well and they are my thing due to my job.

The Chilly Hollow Needlepoint Adventure said...

Almost forgot about Pat's comment on freshening her blog. It's a lot of work to figure out how to manipulate HTML but it really does help make blogs more readable and with nicer features. Still can't get any polls to work right, though.

The Chilly Hollow Needlepoint Adventure said...

Yes, I saw that. Amazing! Bet you get a lot done on a long road trip, too.

ChitownStitcher said...

I always keep small projects in the car for stitching while in there. When DH is driving, I can get alot done, especially when driving through our homestate of Illinois, which tends to be flat and boring. Other states, I am always looking up at the beautiful hills and mountains. In our old neighborhood it was common to get stopped by 10 minute freight trains, and while everyone around me was getting frustrated in their cars, I would get some stitching done.

The Chilly Hollow Needlepoint Adventure said...

I've heard of folks who got a lot of stitching done at red lights but I never found that easy to do since I'm the one driving always.