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Following are just a few examples of graphics we've created and manipulated. To give you a better idea of our abilities, all graphics used on every web site we've made are original, created in either Adobe Photoshop, Corel Photopaint, Adobe Illustrator, or some combination of the three.

This photo of Sarah's former roommate, Yuri, started as two images; one of Yuri (taken on a digital camera) and one of the old clock tower in Spokane, Washington (taken on a point-and-shoot regular camera). She combined them in Adobe Photoshop and now they are the image you see.



Several years ago, we discovered The Hunger Site (www.thehungersite.com) and made this banner for them, so that supporters could graphically link to the site. This was before The Hunger Site became managed by GreaterGood.com, so the look and feel is not the same as the new web site.

This self-portrait was taken using the time-delay feature on a digital camera. After it made it to the computer, it was cropped, put into grayscale (Sarah likes black and white photos, the contrast makes them moodier), and otherwise adjusted (the light levels, that kind of thing). The result is a light-but-serious shot.


We're including this piece and the next two because many of you are probably not aware that we create fine art as well as computer art. This means that we can make you the graphic you want, no matter what medium you need. This is a pencil sketch of Rose from the very popular Titanic, drawn from the soundtrack cover.

A fast sketch done in ink for the opening page of a site . The site was supposed to be fun and evoke a "carefree" feeling (the title was "wwwheee"), so Sarah rendered a loose, detail-less drawing. The actual image used for the site is a "mouseover," meaning that when you put your mouse on it, it changes (in this case, to a color version).

An absent-minded doodle Sarah made with a gel pen while listening to someone's speech.