Electric Rain – Swift 3D PS Plug-in for Photoshop
Electric Rain – Swift 3D PS Plug-in for Photoshop looks to do a much better job of 3D than Photoshops own built in 3D interface (which I think sucks BTW). I’m a big fan of eRain products and this one seems to be very easy to use. Sadly it’s only for the PC so Mac users are out of luck. Now the marketing copy from erain.. Swift 3D PS is a fun and easy-to-use Photoshop plug-in that will have you exploring entirely new hemispheres of Photoshop CS4 Extended. It accomplishes simple 3D tasks in seconds with remarkable results and places your 3D text, extrusions or models back into Photoshop as 3D layers. These layers remain fully editable by Swift 3D PS, even after Photoshop’s array of layer styles and filters are applied. Swift 3D PS offers the same powerful capabilities of our standalone product, but works within the confines of the Photoshop environment.
How to price your Flash projects?
Determining what to charge for your services can be very a difficult decision. “It will forever dominate your destiny”, as Yoda once said to Luke in Star Wars. In my experience, you do not want to start your hourly rate too low, because once you land a few larger clients you will have great difficulty migrating them to a higher hourly rate (that is, if you decide to charge hourly). What you charge hourly should reflect what the market would bear. So in other words, you should try to charge as much as clients are willing to pay …..
Sharing your ideas to create more business
Sharing things you have learned is one of the best (and free) ways to gain more business. Clients will come to respect your opinion if you become recognized in your field for a particular area of Web development. For instance, I co-authored a book on Flash usability called Flash 99% Good: A Guide to Macromedia Flash Usability. The book generated a lot of positive PR. Macromedia (now Adobe) featured the book on their site, and the related book site won numerous national design awards …
Keeping in contact with your clients
One of the biggest struggles I have found being a freelancer is keeping in contact with my clients. Sometimes my clients will go five months before they do another project with me. Over time I have learned I need to keep my name and e-mail address in front of them constantly, so they think of me first when they have a new project they are considering. But how do you do this without bugging the hell out of them? These are busy people, so sending them jokes and ? ˜hi how are you doing?’ …
Google Yourself
In December 2002, Randy Cohen of the New York Times answered a reader’s ethical question regarding a friend who had used Google to do some background checking on a man she had been on a date with. When she learned that the man, a doctor, had been involved in several malpractice suits, she had a much lower opinion of the man, which presumably affected the relationship.
7 rules to keep your clients
No matter how great your work is, you can lose a client and damage your reputation if you don’t make a practice of good customer service. Your client wants to know that the money they’re spending on you is worth it. They’ll even pay more money for you than your competitors if they value the relationship. So the key is to endear yourself to your clients by giving them the highest quality service possible. Here are some basic points on maintaining good customer relationships that can set you apart from the pack:
Webdesign Freelance Tips: Kirill Brusilovsky Interview
The following is an interview with Kirill Brusilovsky the founder of the popular site crossmind.net This interview originally appeard in the “Web Designers Success Guide” published several years ago. This information is still useful so I post it here now.
Finding work – the cold e-mail campaign
So how do you go about getting a small base of paying clients? The way I started was by simply using my network of friends and associates. I heard it once said that philosophy is common sense dressed up in a 3-piece suite. And it is true even for a one-man-show freelance business. E-mail your friends, family, associates and acquaintances and tell them you are looking for freelance work.
Preloader Resources for Flash
In the spirit of the “Preloader Gallery” we recently featured, I thought it would be nice to share a list of resources for Flash developers to aid their search for high quality preloader source code and ideas. Most of the resources are “artist” friendly, so tweener-types will be fine with these resources …

Kevin Airgid is an internationally recognized designer, author and speaker. He runs a small interactive studio that develops creative projects for clients such as: Amnesty, ESPN, Ford, MTV and Pepsi.
OOOii brings Flash and AIR to Star Trek
The FlashBlog has a really great interview with the company that built all the futuristic interfaces for the various Star Trek ships. OOOii is the same company that brought the Minority Report UI to the silver screen as well. Of course all done in Flash!
” For Star Trek, senior developer Dave August created a complete ActionScript 3 framework for compositing and sequencing various effects that was used live on the set during filming. He also created an AIR application which was used for authoring the various sequences and also to control them as the actors manipulated them.” [via The Flash Blog ..]