Archive for the ‘Tips 'n' Tricks’ Category

Creating the Perfect Holiday Book

Friday, July 23rd, 2010

We’ve created a definitive list of top tips to help you create a photobook that’ll keep your summer holiday memories vibrant and alive for years to come…

Packing, planning or unpacking?

If you’re unpacking already it’s a little too late for photography tips, but for those of you still desperately looking for your sandals here are a few ideas to keep in mind:

  1. Photos of tickets, train stations, airports and sign posts are perfect for dividing up the design of your book. These pictures can work as perfect ‘chapter titles’, so don’t forget to take out the camera at these often missed moments.
  2. Everyone takes photos of the beach and local architecture, but the local people, customs and food are often forgotten key aspects of any holiday. Take photos of your favourite exotic dish, that bizarre desert and the local people that really made your holiday special to you.
  3. Make sure you pass the camera around between each of you during the holiday. Nothing’s worse than coming back and realising you’re not in any of the photos because you were the one taking them every time!
  4. Just as important as the point above is remembering that you don’t need someone from your group in every photo. Try and get an even mix between scenic shots and photos with yourselves in to keep it varied and interesting.
  5. When you come to take the big ‘landmark’ photos, the Eiffel Tower, the Statue of Liberty, Birmingham’s Sea Life Centre, why not and try taking them from a different angle to the standard postcard position? With a little imagination you can add your own spin to these classic scenes.

Design Time

Now you’re back, you’ve just about got all the sand out of your shoes and your shoulders are already peeling – it’s time to think about how to whip all your holiday snaps into a fantastic layout:

  1. First of all scan through all your photos to find THE photo, the one that defines you holiday in a single shot. This will be the one that instantly gets you giggling, swooning or booking a return flight, either way you’ll recognise it pretty fast. Once you’ve got it, that’s your cover image. Simply finish it off with a title in a topical font and the dates of your trip.
  2. As well as using your photos of tickets and sign posts to divide up your book you can signpost new sections by switching to a new layout theme. Keeping your layouts consistent within these sections will give your design a professional feel plus a sense of progression through the story of your holiday.
  3. While we’re talking about layouts, don’t forget to leave yourself room to add text. You may remember the names of people and places now, but by adding them to your design you can ensure their future posterity. You don’t need to stick to simple title and dates either, try writing little descriptive section to important photos: add a back story, some notes on how you felt at that exact moment for you to relive in years to come.
  4. Remember that you don’t need to use every photo that you’ve taken. It’s much better have one massive photo that really shows off a scene rather than trying to fit in several smaller, similar photos. Fantastic or definitive shots should be given pride of place as full page or double page backgrounds – the clearer the shot, the clearer the memory!
  5. If you’ve come back to find that you’ve forgotten an all important landmark shot or that you’d quite fancy an impossible arial overview to finish off your book – don’t worry! You can find lots of high resolution photos online on sites like Locr and Flickr, just make sure you make note of any copyright or royalty information.
  6. For extra ideas and inspiration flick through our fantastic online example books. There’s everything from Cuban getaways to snowy Lapland adventures. Click here to see our examples.

The perfect wedding album

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

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In honour of all of you future husbands and wives we’ve put together our top tips for creating that perfect lasting memory of your big day: the wedding album.


1. Main album or a fun extra?

If you’re planning for your photobook to be your main wedding album, nothing gives your design the right feel like an XL or XXL with a beautiful cream premium linen cover. Or, if you’re planning to create your wedding CEWE PHOTOBOOK as an addition to your main wedding album you can pick from our other great sizes for something fun and less conventional. If your main wedding album is a little too large to easily take around with you, why not create a more portable soft cover book.

2. The more photos the merrier!

Make sure you get a copy of all your professional photos as jpegs from your photographer. Also, don’t forget to get digital photos from all your friends and family who took their own cameras to your wedding. These pictures can give a whole different angle on your big day – you can even offset them against your professional photos as “behind the scenes” moments. Plus, no matter how good your photographer was they can’t be everywhere at once, who know what jems they missed that your guests managed to capture on camera.

3. It’s all in the preparation…

Before you get started, have a look over all of your photos and decide how you want to order your book. If you’re going for a chronological, order why not split your design into separate sections (getting prepared, the main service, wedding breakfast etc) with their own titles and mini description. It’s also worth considering who is going to want their own copy of your finished book. For example, try creating the body of your design and then saving two different versions: one with more photos from the groom’s side of the family and another for the bride’s.

4. Speeches, surnames and certificates

Remember, this is an album that you will want to look back at wistfully when you’re both old and grey. Add in place names, family names, friends names, extracts from the menu, speeches and ceremony – all the wonderful little aspects that a camera doesn’t always pickup. These little bits and pieces will help give your wedding book a personal and emotive feel, helping to bring back the memories for years to come. Make sure that your photographer gets a good, clear shot of the wedding certificate so you can give it pride of place as a double page spread.

5. Creating the perfect layout

Close ups of orders of ceremony, table settings and the bride’s and bridesmaid’s dresses can make fantastic page backgrounds. Often the back of the bride’s dress can make a fantastic front cover, with the whole area taken up by the material with room for overlaid text. Image masks can add fantastic looking fades to your images, giving your layout that professional feel. Also, remember that it’s always better to have fewer images to a page so that you can show them off at larger sizes – you can always add more pages.

6. What happened next…

So many people go on wonderful, once in a lifetime holiday honeymoons and forget to bring back anything more than sunburn. Take your camera! And when you’re back, remember think CEWE PHOTOBOOK…

Tip ‘n’ Trick: Valentine’s Day Memories

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

blog_val1It’s nearly Valentine’s day and you’re thinking of creating a CEWE PHOTOBOOK for your partner. The plan is to put together a book so fantastically romantic that it makes them go all wibbly at the knees, while simultaneously reminding them just how darn lucky they are to have you – no problem! Here are our top tips:

1. It’s the little things: Don’t worry if you don’t have a hard drive full of Caribbean vistas, it’s the stories that go around the photos that matter as much as the photos themselves. It could be a photo of a dachary or a dustbin – the more in-jokes the better.

2. Add a love note: Be creative with your use of text around your photos; try and remember what you were talking about in that moment, what was about to happen or what was special to just you in that shot. Small things like looking up ‘that wonderful hotel’s name can really add a personal touch.

3. The trip of a lifetime: Depending how long you’ve been together you could create a CEWE PHOTOBOOK spanning the whole of your relationship with photo highlights from years gone by – “our first kiss”, “our first holiday”, “that time you accidently backed my car into the garage”. Scanning in old photos is a great way of bringing those romantic memories back.

4. Just the two of us: Remember, this book is all about you and your partner. Focus on photos of just the two of you and try not to include too many group shots as they’ll ultimately detract from the mood. This book is your spotlight, be greedy!

Tip ‘n’ Trick: Getting the Right Angle

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

Ever started to put together your photobook only to find that your layout’s just not quite coming together, that your photos aren’t somehow ‘fitting’ together? No, it’s not Dad’s shoddy photography skills – your book’s the wrong way round!

Landscape and portrait photo books lend themselves best to different types of shots and styles, picking the right one for your project can make a world of difference to your design and the end feel of your book.

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Landscape Photo Books

Landscape books, almost conversely, lend themselves particularly well to portrait photos. With a double page spread you can fit four portrait photos at a large size. This layout also lends itself to showing chronological events through your photos, creating a visual storyboard.

Using stylized shots in this layout can also create an ‘art gallery’ feel, especially when teamed up with thick borders. Landscape books are also the place to truly show off your panoramic shot. If you’ve got scenic sunsets and rolling countryside vistas simply set them as double page backgrounds and let the pictures do the talking.



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Portrait Photo Books

If you’ve got lots of photos that you want to feature in your book, portrait is definitely the way to go. With the inherent height of the pages, portrait books lend themselves to creating rows of images. The thing to remember here, however, is to mix up your layouts and not have every page looking the same. Take a normal couple of rows of photos and try enlarging some slightly, rotating others to create a more fun ’scrap book’ type feel to add some fun to your design.

Just as landscape books are good for showing portrait photos, portrait books are great for displaying lots of landscape shots. Simple layouts with two equally sized shots forming a column on each page are the perfect way to showcase lots of panoramic shots at a good clear size.


If you’re still not sure which orientation is best for you, or if you’ve got a mix of both types of photos, don’t worry – that’s what square photo books are for!

Tip ‘n’ Trick: Creating the perfect CEWE PHOTOBOOK this Christmas

Friday, December 11th, 2009

After all the mince pies, tinsel, presents and turkey Christmas is all about being together with the family. It’s there, with everyone full and flagging around the table, that the presence of someone’s new girlfriend sparks an avalanche of embarrassing anecdotes and family tales. Mum will end up scurrying around the house, searching high and low for “that photo with him in his little red and yellow plastic car” only to return dusty and disheartened – she knows it’s got to be there somewhere…

This year why not save Mum’s poor old knees and create her and the family the perfect photo book full of all those cherished memories. Here are out ten top tips for creating the perfect Christmas CEWE PHOTOBOOK:

10. Occasion or annual?

Don’t have enough snaps of the same occasion? No problem, why not create a fantastic overview of your year with a little bit of everything!

9. Zoom in on what’s important
While creating your layout don’t forget to zoom in and get the important element of your photo as large and as central as you can. This lets you cut off any less important elements like walls, strangers or mother-in-laws.

8. Less is more: things are better, bigger
Sometimes it’s all too easy to be overzealous with your layout, trying to fit in as many photos as possible. Try picking out the best photo from a group of similar snaps and making it as big as possible, even fill the page, to really show it off.

7. Before we were digital…
Everyone’s digital photo collection will only stretch so far. If you want to include some vintage memories why not scan in a few old prints to use in your CEWE PHOTOBOOK? P.s. Don’t forget to turn off the automatic image correction for your scanned snaps.

6. Creating the right setting
Nothing gives a photobook that professional feel like the perfect background. There are lots of great backgrounds ready in our software with many more available free to download. Choose from a wide range of themes and colours to perfectly compliment your photos.

5. Special effects for your special memories
Image masks are perfect for creating special effects around your images. If you’ve not used them before, these masks add shaped transparencies to your image – turning your photo into anything from a film strip, to a heart shape, to a star fade.

4. Keep everyone happy
Nobody likes to be left out – and this is especially true when designing your photobook. Try and make sure that there is a roughly even amount of photos of everyone in your book. Often one person is always left out of the best shots (because they were taking them!) so be sure to give the designated photographer their fair share of appearances.

3. Create your own layouts and colour schemes
To make your book look really professional try sticking to just 4 or 5 page designs that you are happy with. Continuity in design both highlights your photos and provides you set areas for your own text.

2. More book, more memories
Before you start creating your photo book have a quick look through all the photos that you’re planning to use. Are they mostly landscape or portrait, are there photos you’d like to use across whole or double pages, do you have big group photos or lots of small single shots? Ask yourself these questions before choosing which size of photo book you want to go for. Remember: if in doubt always go for the size up – your favourite memories can always be too small, but they can never be too big!

1. Save time, let the Assistant do the hard work for you!
Using the Assistant tool is a great way to save time when laying out your book. All you need to do tell it which set of images to choose from, select a few little design options and tell the Assistant to create your book. In just a few moments your book will be filled with all your chosen snaps letting you do any minor tweaks and swaps to make it perfect.