Large grain silos bathed in orange and green light. Melbourne Docks.
This is a Great Looking Highly Detailed Print of a one of a kind design, Exclusivly Offered only By Artworkdesigns on RedBubble! Its a Lamborghini Gallardo in a Black Widow Theme. We custom create all of our own designs, on all the products that we list on RedBubble. This is Sure to please anyone who loves fine exotic cars.
This is a Great Looking Highly Detailed Print of a one of a kind design, Exclusivly Offered only By Artworkdesigns on RedBubble! Its a Lamborghini Gallardo in a Black Widow Theme. We custom create all of our own designs, on all the products that we list on RedBubble. This is Sure to please anyone who loves fine exotic cars.
This is a Great Looking Highly Detailed Print of a one of a kind design, Exclusivly Offered only By Artworkdesigns on RedBubble! Its a Lamborghini Gallardo in a Black Widow Theme. We custom create all of our own designs, on all the products that we list on RedBubble. This is Sure to please anyone who loves fine exotic cars.
This is a Great Looking Highly Detailed Print of a one of a kind design, Exclusivly Offered only By Artworkdesigns on RedBubble! Its a Lamborghini Gallardo in a Black Widow Theme. We custom create all of our own designs, on all the products that we list on RedBubble. This is Sure to please anyone who loves fine exotic cars.
This is a Great Looking Highly Detailed Print of a one of a kind design, Exclusivly Offered only By Artworkdesigns on RedBubble! Its a Lamborghini Gallardo Design. We custom create all of our own designs, on all the products that we list on RedBubble. This is Sure to please anyone who loves fine exotic cars.
This is a Great Looking Highly Detailed Print of a one of a kind design, Exclusivly Offered only By Artworkdesigns on RedBubble! Its a Lamborghini Gallardo in a Black Widow Theme. We custom create all of our own designs, on all the products that we list on RedBubble. This is Sure to please anyone who loves fine exotic cars.
This is a Great Looking Highly Detailed Print of a one of a kind design, Exclusivly Offered only By Artworkdesigns on RedBubble! Its a Lamborghini Gallardo in a Black Widow Theme. We custom create all of our own designs, on all the products that we list on RedBubble. This is Sure to please anyone who loves fine exotic cars.
The WWII victory ship ” American Victory” that is docked in Tampa, FL.
The Port of Burnie, Tasmania. View overlooking the Burnie Port, with a Cruise Ship in Port and the woodchip piles in the foreground, a product we export to Japan.
_Warning: This is a solution looking for a problem. It’s also aimed at people who have the ability to execute ruby...
Warning: This is a solution looking for a problem. It’s also aimed at people who have the ability to execute ruby scripts. Edit: I’ve now used this tool to knock up a quick and dirty website as a simple test of the idea. I’ve seen a few people ask for this, and I’ve been after a way to do this myself: a facility on RedBubble that lets you export a full list of your works (or, at the very least, your art) so that you can do something else with it elsewhere. Today I got to thinking that it should be possible to scrape the data from my public art page. A bit of hacking with ruby later (using its “net/http” and “rexml/document” modules) and I had something that produced a very simple tab-delimited text file containing the work ID and the work title (given these two items it’s pretty easy to infer everything else). Like I say: this is a bit of a solution looking for a problem right now, but a quick test with Google Docs shows that the file imports nicely as a spreadsheet: I’m also thinking that such data could be handy as the starting point for writing a tool that generates some sort of front-end (on one of my own sites) into my works on RedBubble. If you think this sounds interesting, and if you’re able to run ruby scripts, pop over here and grab a copy.
Yesterday I finally got around to using my little tool for exporting my RedBubble art list...
Yesterday I finally got around to using my little tool for exporting my RedBubble art list to build a quick and dirty site that acts as a simple “front door” into my works here. Given that I’ve had the domain davep.co.uk hanging around not doing anything useful for a while I’ve placed it over there. At the moment it’s a quick and dirty hack, more of a proof of concept than anything else, I’ll probably expand it into something more at some point in the future. But, for now, here’s the first version of Photography by Dave Pearson.
With a bit more time on my hands, I’d have loved to try all of these.
Ever since I wrote getrbart I’ve been toyi…
Ever since I wrote getrbart I’ve been toying with the idea of writing a variation on that theme that might be useful to people who aren’t in the habit of getting “down and dirty” on their Windows machines, people who prefer not to install software they don’t know about and who don’t fancy running command line scripts. Last week I finally cracked and started work on something: This is a very early release of the software, it doesn’t do a whole lot of stuff. Things it does do: Lets you download a list of all your public art on RedBubble. Lets you save the list and load it again later. Lets you download it again (dur!) Lets you export the list as a comma-separated values file. Lets you export the list as a tab-separated values file. Lets you export the list as a MediaRSS file. Lets you export the list as a set of HTML files, which might be useful for including in your own website (if you have one). Please note that this is a very early release of the tool. I’m making it available to people who are feeling adventurous (or foolish, depending on how you want to look at it) and who won’t mind reporting problems or giving suggestions. I can’t promise that it’ll do everything you want, but I can promise that it’ll be free to download, free to use and will always be free to use. If you fancy having a play head over here and have a read and, if you like what you see, download, install and have a play. For the programmers out there: the source code can be found over on github. PS: Yes, I know the application icon sucks in a big way. I’m a developer, not a designer. :P Version Details: v1.10.0.0 — Released 2009-10-30 / v1.9.0.0 — Released 2009-06-02 / v1.8.0.0 — Released 2008-10-14 / v1.7.0.0 — Released 2008-10-12 / v1.6.0.0 — Released 2008-09-21 / v1.5.0.0 — Released 2008-05-21 / v1.4.0.0 — Released 2008-05-16 / v1.3.0.0 — Released 2008-05-16 / v1.2.0.0 — Released 2008-05-15 / v1.1.0.0 — Released 2008-05-14
I’ve just uploaded a new version of my RedBubble art manager application...
I’ve just uploaded a new version of my RedBubble art manager application (this is v1.2.0.0). You can get it from here. The main change in this release is to enhance the “promote a work” dialog as per Julie Langford’s suggestion. Whereas before it simply let you promote with a simple image it now lets you promote with a simple image or one of the various product previews: Another change is that I’ve added a command that takes you directly to a work’s edit page on RedBubble, something I thought of after reading a comment made by Shelley Heath. Edit to add: I’ve just noticed a small bug. If you try and generate a promotion code for a mounted print with no border the resulting code doesn’t work. This is now fixed and will be available in the next release.
I’ve just uploaded a new version of my RedBubble art manager application...
I’ve just uploaded a new version of my RedBubble art manager application (this is v1.5.0.0). You can get it from here. There are no new features in this release, all it does it tidy up a couple of loose ends and adds a little more error checking in places.
Acrylic on canvas This work was a bit of a statement by myself to the attitude of artworks in my area. I live in a rural town and was always annoyed that people would ask me why i dont paint ‘lovely landscapes’ and ‘paintings of horses and cows – people around here love that stuff….’ CRINGE! / So at our local art awards i decided to do ‘the cow’ but i wanted to add the politics. Yep the cow looks like it is soulful… but around here cows are business and they make you money and we dont give a rats arse if you are selling them for meat or in this case export. / So I just injected abit of text to help people think about it. / The funny thing about it is that it won first prize at the awards.. and all the comments were like ‘oh we love the cow… he’s so cute’ and similiar comments and i just shook my head on the inside. Don’t think they got it!
I’ve been meaning to do this for a while now and, today, I finally got around to it. Having created a github “acco…
I’ve been meaning to do this for a while now and, today, I finally got around to it. Having created a github account today one of the first things I did was create a project for RBArtMan. The code is released under the terms of the GNU GPL. This way, if anyone fancies spinning off their own version, or picking it up and carrying on should I fall under a bus, the source is now available.
Ralph’s Antiques – Green Bay, Wisconsin HDR from 3 images. Lit by a red and blue neon sign. My Bogen fits in unassumingly with the rest of the clutter.
NOTE: I’ve now created a new script – read about it here...
NOTE: I’ve now created a new script – read about it here I’ve been looking for some more detailed reporting in ‘My Bubble’, so I can track how things move over time, and in response to different ‘events’ – like when I add new items, adding to groups etc. Ultimately we need some reporting tools to export the stats that are shown on the art, t-shirts, calendars, writing and journal pages – to some usable format – or better still some reports (a la Google Analytics (I wish)) that can slice and dice the stats for different time periods. This would really support the ‘commercial’ goals of RedBubblers. Anyway – back to the present day – here’s a GreaseMonkey user script (for Firefox) that plops a table of stats under your ‘works list’ on any of the My bubble pages that gives you stats. The idea is that you simply copy the text and paste it directly into Excel (it’s actually SemiColon delimited) – make sure you paste as Text (older versions need this to be explicitly done through ‘Paste Special’). It shouldn’t need any ‘text to columns’ mucking around. The major drawback at the moment is that you’d need to load each page manually (including page1, page2 etc if you’ve got quite a few works). I’m not aware of any way to force ‘view all’ rather than paged. After Page 1 then you might want to omit the header row. There’s lots of ways this could be made more slick, but it’s probably not worth the technical effort at the moment – I want to encourage RB to provide some reporting capability :) I haven’t worked out exactly how best to use this yet. I still manually grab the ‘summary’ stats most days to see how things are going, and make a note of what I did since the last stats were taken (to try and work out if anything made a positive difference) but at least if I capture this info (with dates) then it can be manipulated somehow. If I come up with anything useful in Excel I’ll post it here. Any suggestions or feedback welcome. Download it from my site, or if that’s down – from my backup (note: the second link requires to you actually save the file first – then just load it into Firefox to install).
After playing with my original CSV exporter...
After playing with my original CSV exporter I couldn’t resist trying to improve it somewhat. UPDATE (14/05/2009) : Amended to cater for the new MyBubble layout – no visual changes UPDATE (26/03/2009) : Amended to cater for the new MyBubble page – now look down the right of the page for the little excel icon :) UPDATE (31/12/2008) : Fixed a bug and all my scripts now also available on UserScripts.org UPDATE (24/12/2008) : Now added RB work ‘ID’ and Page number (as requested by Jo). The downside to the original script was that it required you to go onto each ‘works’ page (e.g. clothing p1, p2, art, writing etc) to get the stats for each. This version (named slightly differently on purpose) works only on the My Bubble page, via a sneakily inserted ‘quick link’ called ‘Retrieve CSV Stats’. Just click the link and ‘hey presto’ (after a number of seconds) you should find a number of tables at the bottom of the page with all your current work statistics (clothing, art, writing, calendars, journal) in a semicolon-delimited format (commas are more likely to appear in work titles and screw everything up :) ). The idea is that you simply copy the text and paste it directly into Excel – make sure you paste as Text (older versions need this to be explicitly done through ‘Paste Special’). It shouldn’t need too much ‘text to columns’ mucking around. If you like the sound of this then: Download it from UserScripts. Some people have been very kind in reporting bugs from previous scripts so please post a comment if something goes drastically wrong… PS: For those of a technical disposition it then basically does some rather long-hand processing and retrieves each mybubble works page behind the scenes (using JQuery AJAX), gathers up the stats and then spits them out into separate tables at the bottom of the screen. The tricky bit is grafting together potentially multiple pages of works into one list (something I’d love RB to support as a preference).
Ferrari Cavallino Classic @ The Breakers Hotel, Palm Beach, FL
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