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<!--Generated by Squarespace Site Server v4.1.2 (http://www.squarespace.com/) on Mon, 12 May 2008 08:23:11 GMT--><rss xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/" xmlns:itunes="http://www.itunes.com/dtds/podcast-1.0.dtd" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" version="2.0"><channel><title>Scrap Rants</title><link>http://scrapability.squarespace.com/scrap-rants/</link><description>Scrapability rants on Scrapbooking</description><copyright>Scrapability</copyright><language>en-GB</language><generator>Squarespace Site Server v4.1.2 (http://www.squarespace.com/)</generator><item><title>Fontstruct</title><category>Web Links</category><category>Mixed Media Work</category><category>Traditional (Paper) Scrapbooking</category><dc:creator>Michelle@Scrapability</dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 12 May 2008 07:19:03 +0000</pubDate><link>http://scrapability.squarespace.com/scrap-rants/2008/5/12/fontstruct.html</link><guid isPermaLink="false">12556:82590:1830383</guid><description><![CDATA[<br /><a href="http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/">FontStruct | Build, Share, Download Fonts</a><br /><br />Build your own fonts, download some created by others. <br />]]></description><wfw:commentRss>http://scrapability.squarespace.com/scrap-rants/rss-comments-entry-1830383.xml</wfw:commentRss></item><item><title>Things I've Learnt While Writing a Novel in a Month</title><category>Writing</category><dc:creator>Michelle@Scrapability</dc:creator><pubDate>Sat, 10 May 2008 08:12:44 +0000</pubDate><link>http://scrapability.squarespace.com/scrap-rants/2008/5/10/things-ive-learnt-while-writing-a-novel-in-a-month.html</link><guid isPermaLink="false">12556:82590:1826771</guid><description><![CDATA[<p>It&#8217;s been a week now since I put the &#8216;The End&#8217; bit to my Pod Novel - written - well almost - in a month. I&#8217;ve since spent a day formatting all the chapters into a manuscript (500+ pages! - must get rid of half of them!) and playing around the edges. I created a world of characters and things which needed documenting, and have spent a week doing up things like character specs, relationships, family trees, documenting the customs I created etc. It&#8217;s been fun, without actually reading the whole thing back. Now the Novel is put into a drawer and I&#8217;ll go back to read and edit it in a few weeks. </p><p>In the meantime, there has been some learning lessons by me and this is a quick documentation of those, from a wholey personal perspective - </p><ul><li>Although I need background music / television / radio etc whilst doing prep and planning work (and the subsequent post-work after the novel) I&#8217;ve found<strong> I write best and more deeply when the world is as quiet </strong>as I can make it. I&#8217;ve not watched television for over a month now, other than at night once finished the writing day. <br /></li><li>I started off writing on the main family PC in the study. This should have been a good environment to write in, all setup with everything needed. Somehow, after the first week of the month, I drifted more and more to taking a copy of the work in progress off onto a USB drive, and swapping it onto the laptop. By the end of the month, that&#8217;s how I ended up writing - solely on the laptop, on my lap, plugged into the electrics, and sitting in an armchair or on a couch in the living room, looking out some french doors to all that was going on in my back garden. I<strong> need scenery, it seems, to allow myself to look up and think.</strong></li><li>I can&#8217;t make inspiration happen - no matter if I walk around the lake on a dog walk, or am half asleep in the evening, both thinking about (churning over) the novel I am breathing and eating all day. For a while I thought all that thinking was a waste of time, because nothing ever popped into my mind at the time; no resolutions to a problem, no plot twists that took me where I&#8217;d not planned to go. But the time outs, allowed to become <strong>thinking / churning times do provide value - later on</strong>. When I wake up and I&#8217;ve suddenly got a plausible resolution, or when I&#8217;m sitting in a car somewhere and something does occur to me. <br /></li><li>I lost some of those inspirations, and had to re-engineer them the next day. At the time I thought to myself - great idea, I&#8217;ll certainly remember that one. And yet, they drifted off just like that. I still haven&#8217;t developed the discipline in myself, despite every writer saying you should do this, to actually always have a notebook or journal around me. I don&#8217;t know why I rebel against it, but currently I do. So I&#8217;m writing it down here - <strong>life would be much easier as a writer for me to have a notebook</strong> about my person, bedside, lugged around by the dog, whatever&#8230;</li><li><strong>Writing is tough work.</strong> No surprises there. But I put in a full day&#8217;s work, plus the domestics, school chores, and external work I needed to do, and although I have not forgotten what it&#8217;s like to be a fultime office worker with long commutes home, this is different - and worse again. Writing never leaves you when you start dinner, or walk around the supermarket. It&#8217;s never not there, and constantly just behind your eyes sitting there ready to come out of your mind at the most inopportune moments. It&#8217;s exhausting, tiring and tough physically also. Your neck hurts, arms and fingers hurt from all that typing. Or perhaps that&#8217;s just because I&#8217;m a driven person, but I can understand those writers who spend only three hours per day on it, and deliver a book a year. Still, it&#8217;s the toughest work I&#8217;ve ever attempted. And it&#8217;s nice to rest a little now that something like that has been achieved.</li><li>I&#8217;m a Planning Freak. I planned just about every scene / plot or subplot I needed beforehand, for a month, and this actually saved my bacon on several occasions, because it allowed me to know what the end goal was, and filled in some spaces where I seriously didn&#8217;t know what to do.&nbsp; However, I also allowed my characters to pull me into scenes and plot turns which I&#8217;d never contemplated, causing a rejig of the planned for scenes. They took over and surprised me many times. Scenes were written I never expected, and others I thought important initially never worked out. For me, <strong>Pre-Planning then Flexibility seems the way to go. <br /></strong></li><li>I enjoy planning beforehand and over the novel creation the most. Not the actual writing. And <strong>I enjoy the incentives of having a timeframe and wordcount target as a challenge to meet and push myself</strong>. I work well in that very confined timeframe (this is not to suggest the quality of the novel is anything at all). So I&#8217;m going to try it all again in November during the offical NaNoWriMo month, and join up. Originally I had another idea for a different novel. It&#8217;s been lost in the detritus of this Pod Novel, but I&#8217;m going to raise it up again, develop it over the course of the next month, so that it&#8217;s ready for November. In between, I&#8217;ll edit the first draft of the Pod Novel, and no doubt add to my own learnings. <br /></li></ul>
]]></description><wfw:commentRss>http://scrapability.squarespace.com/scrap-rants/rss-comments-entry-1826771.xml</wfw:commentRss></item><item><title>The Pod Novel - Finished!</title><category>Writing</category><dc:creator>Michelle@Scrapability</dc:creator><pubDate>Sat, 03 May 2008 17:35:57 +0000</pubDate><link>http://scrapability.squarespace.com/scrap-rants/2008/5/3/the-pod-novel-finished.html</link><guid isPermaLink="false">12556:82590:1807614</guid><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://picometer.writertopia.com/words=155025;target=100000" /> <p>The First Draft was finished, half an hour ago, on a lovely spring day where we brought some big pots out of overwintering in the glasshouse, planted up herb planters, baskets and wall hangers with petunias, fushias and one banana plant, and as I put the finishing touches to the final scene, I looked up to discover we have a great tit nest in a clump of ivy on one of our walls, just feet away from the position I&#8217;ve taken lately with my laptop. </p><p>It&#8217;s Day 33, so I cheated by three days, and at 155,000 words, overshot the normal Nanowrimo target by 300%. Call me an overachiever!<br /> </p><p>&nbsp;There&#8217;s much I still want to do, of course. Like celebrate, for instance! But I&#8217;ll make do with pizza and chips tonight, and get some champagne tomorrow from the supermarket. And I had real problems with that final chapter, the big exposition scene - I&#8217;ve worked on it for three days and it&#8217;s still not right, but after reading and re-reading, I found I was questioning it all far too much, and it started to look like the writing of an incompetent amateur, which - admittedly, I am!<br /> </p><p>But, rather than go back, I&#8217;ve promised myself to tuck it away in a dark cupboard and let the pod fester. Then the editing to second draft, or complete annihilation of the monster I created will take place. Probably in late June or July. We&#8217;ll see. </p><p>Now, I&#8217;m going to back up everything, save to another PC, and spend an early night in bed, catching up with T.V. recordings and actually reading a novel finally. What a relief!&nbsp;</p>
]]></description><wfw:commentRss>http://scrapability.squarespace.com/scrap-rants/rss-comments-entry-1807614.xml</wfw:commentRss></item><item><title>Toot, Toot, DAMgirl!</title><category>Personal Projects</category><category>Digital Scrapping</category><dc:creator>Michelle@Scrapability</dc:creator><pubDate>Sat, 03 May 2008 17:03:42 +0000</pubDate><link>http://scrapability.squarespace.com/scrap-rants/2008/5/3/toot-toot-damgirl.html</link><guid isPermaLink="false">12556:82590:1807634</guid><description><![CDATA[<p><span class="full-image-float-left"><img src="http://scrapability.squarespace.com/storage/blog-misc-jpegs/may08_cover_600.jpg?__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION=1209838072656" alt="may08_cover_600.jpg" /></span>The May edition of Digital Artist Magazine is freshly out, and I&#8217;m in it. Check out the On Location article, which features the British Isles this month, and three great scrappers. Er, including me, lol. </p><p><a href="http://digitalartistmagazine.com/blog/" target="_blank">http://digitalartistmagazine.com/blog/</a></p><p>&nbsp;</p>
]]></description><wfw:commentRss>http://scrapability.squarespace.com/scrap-rants/rss-comments-entry-1807634.xml</wfw:commentRss></item><item><title>The Pod Novel - Day 29&amp;30</title><category>Writing</category><dc:creator>Michelle@Scrapability</dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 30 Apr 2008 11:27:39 +0000</pubDate><link>http://scrapability.squarespace.com/scrap-rants/2008/4/30/the-pod-novel-day-2930.html</link><guid isPermaLink="false">12556:82590:1799419</guid><description><![CDATA[<img src="http://picometer.writertopia.com/words=133883;target=100000" /> <p>Technically this should be my last day, but I predicted the need for a further couple, and this seems perhaps more realistic. I hope to get this finished to the The End point within the next couple of days. I&#8217;ve added a further 10,000 words over the last couple of days, and also worked over a large climax, but there is still a little more to do. It&#8217;s close though, and I find easier this final week, with the end in sight. I have to work this afternoon, however - not a great contemplation when it keeps raining overhead, and all I want to do is sit here with a laptop on my knee and move into the final scenes. But&#8230;</p><p>After the champagne pop of celebration - hopefully celebrating my dog getting his large cone collar off his head on the same day, next week I intend to go over the whole thing - not reading it, but reformatting it, and then running the exe that takes all the individual scenes and chapters built into a full single-space manuscript. Then I might go out and buy up some paper, and spit it out into real life. Then I&#8217;ll stick it into a drawer and let it be forgotten for several weeks, while I work on digital designs, and perhaps play around with some other ideas for another novel, just so that I forget this one, enough for the first big read, and redraft. &nbsp;</p>
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