5 Extreme Holiday Photo Card Ideas
What, you still haven't come up with a holiday card idea? Here are a few of my holiday photo card concepts from previous years. If they help you out in a pinch consider it my gift, through Kodak, to you!
#1 - Your Family circa 1100AD
I saw a piece of stained glass from the 1100's hanging in the Louvre in Paris and it gave me inspiration for my annual holiday card. I ran pictures of each family member through an Adobe Photoshop filter to get line art of the faces. Then I made a line art drawing of the family and added the faces to it. The distorted perspective of the medieval design matched my drawing ability ;-) I also added icons and imagery relating to each family member (look for them). Now, here come the neat parts: first, I used the cloning tool in Photoshop to transfer the colors of the glass from the 1100's to the line art I made. This way the colors looked like the original and not just solid flat colors. And second, I printed it on transparency material so everyone got a stained glass version of the family that they could hang in their window. I was thinking of the person who made that original piece of glass and how they couldn't fathom a use like this some 900 years later!
#2 - Simple Photo Ornaments
This one was easy compared to the previous year. I made a collage that contained several ornaments for the Christmas tree tree. I included four hooks on each card. All that was required was a pair of scissors to clip them apart. This, as well as ideas #4 and #5, was output on various kinds of photo paper. I created these to fit in one of the largest envelopes possible, A12 which is 11-1/2" x 4-3/4", that still qualified for normal first class postage.
#3 - On the Cheap "Interactive" Card
A variation on the theme from the year before. Again, scissors to clip apart the card to make a spinning top with the kids pictures on it (toothpick not included), a book mark, and a refrigerator magnet. I bought sticky magnetic stuff and placed a piece on the back of that section, in this case a quote from Gandhi, of each card.
#4 - The Amazing Photo Paper Airplane!
This one took some engineering to pull off. First, I made a paper airplane and colored each side of it with a different color. I then unfolded it. I used this as my key - where the red showed up I placed pictures of one kid, green another, and so forth. I did this in Photoshop. When the completed photo plane was folded pictures of each kid showed up on that part of the plane.
#5 - CD Jewel Case Photo Calendar
Are you looking for a use for those extra CD jewel cases? I made them into calendar/picture frames using seasonal pictures that I had taken over the years. I cropped and trimmed them to fit in the jewel case. I included some instructions to show people how to make the frame. I also included a mention of my Kodak Easyshare Gallery account to view larger version of the photos, with captions, used in the calendar
I have been sending out cards for more than 20 years in a row. My list has grown quite long but I find it a rewarding experience to connect with friends that are scattered to the four corners of the Earth each year at this time.
If these 5 ideas are too involved for you during the crunch of holiday activities you can alway sfallback to traditional photo cards. There are more and more options to choose from each year.
So, what I am doing for this year's card?
Comments
Posted By: Taylor (1/4/2007)
Comment: You never put up the design for the 2006 card. I'm on the edge of my seat here, throw me a bone!
Posted By: Rei (12/22/2006)
Comment: For Mac OS X users, we have a program called HappyNewYear! which creates CD Jewel Case calendars (as well as 4x6 calendars). <a href="http://www.24x7digital.com/happynewyear/">http://www.24x7digital.com/happynewyear/</a>
Posted By: Taylor (11/25/2006)
Comment: Nyah nyah boo boo... I already know what the card is, your bold print can't change that. :)











