Two little Owls, Sitting in a Tree on Cake Central
I love ridiculous cakes and this one takes it.
Helen Bernhard (http://www.helenbernhardbakery.com) bakery on Broadway is hands-down my favorite donut joint in Portland. It’s not the cutesy house, it’s not the incredibly nice service and not even the feeling one has stepping into a real bakery. It’s that they pay attention to texture, sweetness ratios, size and uniformity. This place is the attraction tourists ought to seek out, rather than Voodoo which has little more than quirky pink boxes and dry, chewy dough with obnoxious toppings. It’s ‘weird’ for people who are boring, but it’s not weird, it’s a gimmick. Well, this review isn’t designed for both establishments; truly Helen Bernhard makes non-greasy, melt in your mouth, truly inspiring donuts. I challenge you to find better. There are only a few donut establishments in Portland, so it’s easy to compare. Actually, I’m going to put on a donut crawl of my own…RIGHT NOW.
It’d be an amazing roadside food shack! Ooh, what I wouldn’t do to get a maple waffle and a hot cup of coffee.
(via sensoryadaptation)
Source: teeje
I stopped in here (http://www.pearlbakery.com/) in downtown Portland on my way home just because I like the aroma of a bread bakery. Wasn’t particularly in the mood to shop, but thought to just ‘see what they have’. The bubbly, happy and blonde-ponytailed girl that helped me was just fantastic. She sliced off a bit of their sourdough/whole wheat loaf to see if I thought it would be acceptable with my favorite tuna salad. Though that wasn’t quite the right fit, I opted to purchase another loaf and she offered to slice it for me. The point is that I can buy my bread anywhere, but that experience made me think twice the next time I went to the grocery about where to get my bread.
I love this space, though can’t figure out where I’d make my tea. Well, I’d figure it out! Really cool setup.
Source: suburban-incest
Most small business owners barely have time to manage their social media presence and conventional marketing. Suddenly, video seems to be taking over, and every business must have videos to share on their own website and YouTube.com.
Making videos can sound expensive and daunting, but the process can be much easier - and cheaper than you think - if you assess the project properly. 1. First of all, does video make sense for your business? You probably don’t need to make a video for your company unless you sell a product that’s complex or difficult to explain. For example, if you sell socks, you really don’t need a video to explain what socks are, or demonstrate how they’re worn or explain why you’d want socks. Unless your socks are very upscale and you really feel the sheen of the yarn and beauty of the designs won’t show up well in still photos on your website, I wouldn’t likely recommend you bother with video. Assess your current marketing efforts. If you have plenty of business coming in, and your site is working well for you, hold off on video until you’re ready to kick your marketing up a notch. Here are a few questions to ask yourself: * What information is difficult for your customers to get from your website and other marketing materials? * What questions do they have when they call or email your company? * What could move someone from not understanding your company or products to engaging your company in a deal, or buying your products? If you feel there’s nothing that really can be explained better in video than in pictures and text, stop reading right now, and go focus your time on making your current marketing efforts more effective. Okay, so you’ve read all this, and you still feel that video would help you explain your product, service or process to your potential customers. Here’s the process to follow. 2. Figure out where your video should go on your site, and what you want people to do once they’ve seen it. Consult your web designer to make sure it’s possible to add video where you want it. Pull in your marketing advisors and whoever is going to edit your video now, before you start creating it. Make sure you’re on the right path. *Which pages on your site need a video to explain things better or get people more engaged? *Do you want people to buy something once they’ve seen your video? Share it on their social networks? Sign up for your newsletter? Great, now you know where the video will be placed, who it’s for and what you want them to do once they’ve seen it. Now for the actual creation process! 3. Write out what you need your customers to take away from the video. Written language is very different from verbal language. Read your script aloud — with someone else is best — and rewrite any parts that are too long or awkward to say. This can be forging a more personal connection to your business, understanding a process more clearly or actually buying your product. Translate that message into a few sentences. This will be your voiceover. 4. Choose the visuals that will convey your message. Maybe it’s just you sitting at your desk in the office, talking to the viewer as if they were sitting right in front of you. Maybe it’s taking apart a piece of equipment by hand, and pointing to the individual components. Maybe you’re going to demonstrate the many ways your product can be used. Try to imagine the finished video, and match the visuals to the voiceover. This process is called “storyboarding” in professional video and filmmaking circles. Some of your visuals may communicate just fine without a verbal explanation. If they do, great - you don’t need to force it. Make sure the sequence of images will make sense when they’re presented to the viewer in real time. 5. Decide if music would add to your video. Music can be nice, but don’t let it be so distracting that people will want to mute it. And please be respectful of copyrights. Using copyrighted music is a quick path to getting your video removed from a site like YouTube. There’s plenty of free stock music out there - check out sites like rumblefish.com. You can even use the free tools at aviary.com to create your own video soundtrack. A full presentation means visuals, a voiceover and music. But you don’t have to do it all. Just do what makes the most sense for the placement on your site, for your audience and, most importantly, for the desired result - getting someone to learn more, share with friends or pull out their credit card. A demo of how to screw in a light bulb doesn’t really need music or voiceover, right? You could get away with a simple caption. 6. Who is actually going to shoot the video? What format? Do I need a studio? The ideal person to shoot your video is someone who knows their way around a camera and editing software. It’s also important for that person to understand what resolution and size the video must be for your site and purpose. Lots of people successfully create video just using a basic camera and a tripod, and experimenting with lighting. You may even be able to do a single, well-practiced take….and in that case, you don’t even need an editor. If you do need an editor, expect to pay about $50 per hour for someone to pull it together for you. Be prepared - it can take a lot longer to edit a video than to shoot one. Your editor should be able to give you a digital copy of your video, exported to the proper resolution for your site or YouTube - wherever you plan to display it. You may be able to find someone good on craigslist or Mandy.com or ask your friends and colleagues for recommendations. You may need an experienced professional or video studio if you plan to do animated effects, or if you’re going to work with multiple actors, sets or locations. This will probably cost you a good couple thousand dollars or more. 7. Promote your video. Video shot, edited and placed on your site! Now it’s time to share it in your newsletters and link to it from your company’s Facebook page, Twitter account and other social-networking presences. Ask your staff to blog about it and share it with their own social circles. Be sure you mention your video at in-person gatherings and use it during sales calls and presentations. Give your video a title that includes the important keywords that are relevant to its content. You do want it to show up in Web searches for those keywords…after all, you want lots of people to see it, and videos are an increasingly important part of search results. Tracking is really important. You need to know how many times your video is viewed, and whether people are responding to it as you hoped or expected. Tracking will help you determine whether video makes sense for your business. Sites like YouTube offer you a fair amount of detail. You can use Google Analytics to track views of the video on your site, how people get to it, and what they do once they’ve seen it. Now you know a lot more about what it takes to create a marketing video. If it was all too much for you and your company to handle, consider calling in some help to assist you with creating the concept, production or marketing the video….or all three. Good luck! Questions? Please post here or email me at amy@ringleadercommunications.com
I like the idea of putting tiny food into tiny dishes. I wonder how much that was, because at the end of the day, that’s not much food but is made to appear so. Also I think the one in the top left could use some love. It’s a cool overall effect, and the food does look decent but the wow factor is simply in the container. I might have organized them differently, doing the salad in the middle below the equally dense what looks like tartare might have been better split up for balance. But that’s just me.
Source: cocktailstraw
I loved walking around Bishop’s Close! This free garden is absolutely gorgeous and worth seeing just as much as the Japanese gardens. The website is: http://www.elkrockgarden.com/ and it’s located south of Lewis and Clark college, down by Milwaukie but west of the river, and at the end of a residential street. We walked around for about an hour and a half, and in the middle of the day, no one is even there. There’s an overlook to the river and the Bishop’s house (don’t go in! no public restrooms here) is a stately home donated by the Kerr’s. Go to see the custom weathervane on top with the initials ‘PK’ worked in for the original owner, Peter Kerr.
This link takes you to my aboutus.org talk page, where you can communicate with me about what I do, articles I’ve written or just to learn more about me as a person. Signing up is free and if you have a website or work to promote, Aboutus is an awesome place (as I’ve recently learned) to put a profile for your website and connect up all your links. A one-stop web storehouse to manage your presence and bump up your SEO in a respectable, contextual way. Let me know what you think!