When I started this aspect of my blogging life, I decided that I wanted to post images that were of my own creation. At work I feel obligated to cite image resources because, well, it is the right thing to do. I've always done that on my personal blog as well. If I borrow an image, I cite it's origin. So, that led me to creating my own simple graphics.
This has certainly made me look at the basics of how things are made. I look at shapes. I look at colors. I look at layers. When Tony Vincent first started with Shapegrams, I thought it was a wonderful idea and that sort of spurred me to create my own graphics for my work icons and graphic needs. Google Drawings is probably my favorite app anyway, well, at least for creating things for teachers and students. So, one thing kind of led to another.
I use Google Drawings to create the clip art type graphics. I just add shapes and manipulate them and layer them to get the general concept of what I want. A simple example is the wrench and screwdriver that I used in a recent post:
When that drawing is deconstructed, it is just a bunch of shapes like this:
The shapes forming the screwdriver are on the right of the canvas and the shapes for the wrench are on the left.
I think that is what teachers are wanting in our district right now. Nothing complex - just the basics. So, we are trying to provide basic support for them and their students. We have offered Zoom sessions that last an hour on Tuesday and Wednesday for the past couple of weeks. We show some basics, share basic, introductory information, and field questions related to what we are sharing in a Chat window.
There is nothing exciting and extraordinary about what we are doing to help teachers but many of them are grateful for what we are sharing. There is also nothing exciting and extraordinary about creating your own graphics either it but it is a fun adventure to see what I can create. I would encourage you to do some creating yourself!
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