Don't Make These Mistakes Using PicMonkey to Make Shareable Images

by | May 18, 2015 | Blogging, Photography, PicMonkey, Tutorial | 11 comments

We’re out of town, so I thought I’d take this week to share with you some of the tips and tricks I use on PicMonkey to make this blog prettier. This is installment two of four, see Lesson 1: Using PicMoney to Make Good Photos Great and Bad Photos Pretty Good. PicMonkey is an online photo editing and design site. The basic version is free, but you can also choose a yearly subscription to “Royale” that gets you more options, and no ads. This is not a sponsored post, I just like PicMonkey. This post contains affiliate links.

I make a lot of shareable images. Which means putting saint quotes or other sayings on a photo, and sharing them on Facebook and the blog. Getting shared on social media is a great way to increase visibility of the blog, and it’s also been an easy way for me to share my love of the saints and of celebrating their feast days.

I make almost all of my shareable images with PicMonkey. (In a pinch, when I can’t get to my desktop, I use an iPad app called Rhonna.) The free version of PicMonkey has tons of great options, but I’ve upgraded to the Royale membership, to get all the bells and whistles with no ads.

I’ve learned some tips and tricks over the past couple of years on how to make readable, visually appealing images, that probably won’t get me sued. I’m going to share how I do it with you today.

And I’m going to do that by sharing with you some mistakes I’ve made, so you can avoid them.

-Mistake 1: Using Photos Without Permission-

Google image search has made finding a picture of just about anything very, very easy. But, if you want to USE the pictures you find, on your blog or website or Etsy shop or whatever, you’ve got to be careful. Most of those images are copyrighted, and if you use them without permission you are running the risk of getting sued, not to mention wronging a photographer.

There are plenty of cautionary tales out there. Here are two:

Blogger Beware: You CAN Get Sued For Using Photos You Don’t Own on Your Blog

The $8,000 Mistake That All Bloggers Should Beware

One sure way to avoid trouble is to use your OWN photographs.

Like here:

In this image I used the filter Orton from the Effects Menu, and added Sunglow from the window. I also used an Overlay, to make the text more visible, more on that later.

You can also pay a license fee for the right to use a particular image, sometimes it’s as little as a dollar or two per image, for really great photos or cool clipart like these guns:

Or you can find images that are in the public domain.

21 free public domain image websites (use with care)

Or, use Google image search, just use it right:

Find Reusable and Public Domain Images With Google

I found this image at Wikimedia Commons, in the public domain because the photographer designated it with a creative common license:

From the Filters Menu under the Effects Tab, I selected Daguerrotype, then Shiro:

And this engraving is over 95 years old, which means the copyright is expired:

Or don’t use images at all, just make the words pretty. But that’s going to be another post.

Okay, so now we know how to GET the photos. In an earlier post, I showed you how I use PicMonkey to improve the look of photographs. So I’m going to assume all your photos already look amazing. Now, let’s talk about how to put words on there.

And MORE mistakes to avoid.
-Mistake 2: Using Discordant Fonts-
I started with this quote: “You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our hearts are restless until they rest in you.” -St. Augustine of Hippo
And this image:

And ended up with this sharable quote image:

There was already a filter on the image, so I just PicMonkey to crop the image to square, and put text on it. Pretty easy.
It’s a good image. Looking at it now though, I notice that I would probably make different font choices if I were making this today. The quote text font is very clean-edged, and the “St. Augustine of Hippo” font is a handwriting-type font with less-clean edges. I love using a few different fonts, but I now prefer to use clean-edge fonts together, handwriting-type fonts together, stamping-look fonts together, etc. I think it just gives a more cohesive look to the finished product. More about font choices here.

Like this. All clean-edged fonts:

I started with this image:

From the Effects Menu, I selected Draw. I used the little Eyedropper Tool to select the color of the wall, and used the Draw Effect to get rid of most of the background. Then I added Bokeh Shapes.

Or this. All stamped-look fonts:


I probably use too many different fonts, myself. If you are trying to bring more people to your blog, you want them to be able to recognize an image as your work right away. The best way to do that is to have a consistent look to your shareable images, and only use two to four different fonts.

-Mistake 3: Text Doesn’t Stand Out Enough-
I started with this quote: “Holiness does not consist in doing extraordinary things, it consists in accepting, with a smile, what Jesus sends us. It consists in accepting and following the will of God.” -Blessed Teresa of Calcutta
And this photo:

In PicMonkey, I went to the Filters Menu under the Effects Tab, and selected Daguerrotype, then Shiro. It creates MORE contrast between the background and the text. But I still think this one is kinda hard to see.

To make the text stand out more, you can put something behind it. From the Overlays Menu, I selected a Label, made it white, Faded it to 50%, and using the Right Click Menu, sent it to the back, behind the text.
 

On this image, I did the same thing, but I selected a square from the Shapes Menu, faded it, and stretched it to cover the entire photo.

This is the photo I started with:

I used the Draw Effect from the Effects Menu. Using white, I scrubbed out the background and the extra donkey, then from the Frames Menu, I selected Simple Edge, and kept putting white frames around the edge until I had plenty of room above the donkeys, then I cropped the image square, added the overlay, faded it, and added the text.

– Mistake 4: Not Watermarking Your Images –

A watermark is just a small, often faded logo or text telling everyone that it was YOU who made that image.

I do not watermark all of the photos I put on my blog. Some folks do, it’s a judgement call. Not putting a watermark on the image doesn’t mean you don’t still own it.

I DO, however, watermark all my pinnable or sharable images, so that anyone who likes what they see will know how to find me.

You can just type your name or the name of your blog or organization, make it a reasonable size, fade it, and put it someplace visible yet not distracting. That’s what I do.

You can also use PicMonkey to create a watermark on a transparent background that you can save as a .png file (.jpg won’t have a transparent background) and then drop onto any photo from the Overlays Menu. Once you’ve created the watermark (see a tutorial here) you can click Your Own from the top, and then Computer, and select any saved photo or image to drop right on top of whatever you’re working on.

Okay, I’m sure there’s more. But that’s already a ton.  I hope it made sense. A little? Now get out there and make yourself some shareable quotes!

11 Comments

  1. Tracy Bua Smith

    I enjoy using PM (free version) and it seems that after I watermark all my photos I've spent way too long on my pictures and then my blog posts. I don't edit my pictures. So I'm assuming you know PM and its features really well because I know if I was to produce the quality of shareable images like yours I would be spending all day on one picture. But I guess practice makes perfect and the more you use PM the easier (and faster) it gets, huh?

    • Kendra

      It does take me a while, depending on what I do. If it's something simple, with all one font, I can make one in 15-20 minutes. The printable prayers usually take an hour. But I enjoy doing it, and that's a lot less time than it would take to sew or embroider something. So, for me, it's a quick fix when I feel the need to make SOMETHING.

      But that's why I don't watermark or even always edit my photos for blog posts, even if it only takes two minutes per photo, that adds up.

  2. Ashley Sue

    Thank you for sharing your tips! I get lost sometimes on where to start. I recently found upsplash.com for high res photos that are free to use without a source credit.

  3. AmyJ

    One of the articles in linked to about copyright infringement warns against using Pinterest, not just for posting pictures to a blog, but just using it period. The article scared me, especially after reading some of the comments (darn comments!). Do you have a Pinterest account?

    • Kendra

      I do have a Pinterest account. I use it primarily to pin my own stuff though. But not because of copyright concerns, just because it's not my preferred social media outlet. I know the rules of Pinterest say that, but pinning images you don't own is what almost everyone does with Pinterest. Were there commenters who had been actually sued? Or we're they just worried?

    • AmyJ

      Just someone predicting that Pinterest will become a "minefield of legal claims" because he's seen an upward trend in copyright extortion. It seems copyright laws really do need to be updated for the digital era, but probably won't happen until many more are sued while unknowingly in violation.

  4. Becky

    I'm still learning some of the PicMonkey ropes so this really helped – thanks a bunch for the tips! I'll be reading more about #1 just to be safe 🙂

  5. Kendra

    I just saw that on Facebook! I'm sure my family will understand if I skip the museums tomorrow to hole up in the hotel and watch, right?

    • Kendra

      No, there are plenty of overlays available in the free version.

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Hi! I’m Kendra.

For twenty years now, I’ve been using food, prayer, and conversation based around the liturgical calendar to share the lives of the saints and the beautiful truths and traditions of our Catholic faith. My own ten children, our friends and neighbors, and people just like you have been on this journey with me.

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