My Genius

From Twitter:

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

I think it’s *hilarious* that one of the loading messages on @picnik is “Calling Father Dyer.” That alone is worth the subscription.

-@coffeequeen

Picnik 2008 Year in Review

Saturday, January 10th, 2009
Picnik 2008 Year in Review

The Point: 2008 was a spectacular year for Picnik. Traffic enjoyed a 1400% increase, the Freemium business model was launched with the unveiling of the “free side”, business and product partnerships kept coming with the addition of FontShop, Myspace, Photobox, etc. There were lots of new features added and tons of press mentions and awards, including the I.D. Award for Interactive Best in Show. This post just had to list all those things not only for showing off to our users but also support a concurrent PR “momentum” push.

Read the original post: Picnik 2008 Year in Review

It’s Smashing, ‘Tis

Tuesday, October 21st, 2008

It’s Smashing, ‘Tis

The Point: To announce two awards and a press mention all in one post! And a little showing off:

From the smooth registration form (observe how password and email confirmation fields are hidden until you need them, reducing the perception of complexity) to the actual “in-the-basket” look and feel of this Flash application, Picnik is a joy to use inside and out.

Read the original post: It’s Smashing, ‘Tis

Featured Feedback – First Prize In the County Fair Edition

Friday, September 12th, 2008
Featured Feedback – First Prize In the County Fair Edition

The Point: Showing off more great feedback we get every day! We only did four of these posts, but I had fun doing them and thought they were a great way to show ourselves off and show our users how much we appreciate their feedback.

Read the full post: Featured Feedback – First Prize In the County Fair Edition

Proudly Presenting Panographs and Puzzles on Picnik

Thursday, September 11th, 2008
Proudly Presenting Panographs and Puzzles on Picnik

The Point: This introduced the first couple of good old fashioned Photo Effects we’d had in a little while. And this was the first non-interview blog post that I published under my own name.

Read the original post: Proudly Presenting Panographs and Puzzles on Picnik

Featured Feedback – Super Kudos Edition

Thursday, August 7th, 2008
Featured Feedback – Super Kudos Edition

The Point: More showing off just a little bit of the great feedback we get!

Read the original post: Featured Feedback – Super Kudos Edition

Featured Feedback: Whoalla Boom!

Friday, July 11th, 2008
Featured Feedback: Whoalla Boom!

Read the original post: Featured Feedback: Whoalla Boom!

I.D. Magazine 54th Annual Design Review

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008
id_mag

I.D. Annual Design Review 2008 / Interactive

Best of Category

Picnik

As soon as the group loaded the online photo editor Picnik into a browser, Vinh remarked, “I wish that, rather than commercial sites, there were more entries like this one, sites that are applications. I think that’s where things are going.” His colleagues agreed without hesitation. It was a moment of clarity late in a long day: Here was an entry that truly showed the possibilities of interactive design in 2007 and beyond.

At first, Picnik seems disarmingly simple, with a bubbly navigation, a cheerful grassy header, and zany status messages that read “buttering sandwiches” or “painting sky” as the application loads. That’s on purpose, as part of Picnik’s mission is to make photo editing feel fun and unintimidating.

Start playing with Picnik, though, and it’s quickly apparent how much it can do. It allows you to pull in images from your hard drive (and directly from your webcam, if you have one) and from whichever big online photo warehouse you have an account with, including Flickr, Facebook, Picasa, Photobucket, Webshots, and MySpace. You can also search the web for a particular photo or enter a URL where you know there’s one you want. Once you’re ready to edit, an intuitive toolset lets you perform basic tasks such as cropping, tweaking the exposure, and reducing red-eye in just a couple of clicks, and the advanced settings don’t take much more work. Then you can use the “Create” tab to retouch your image, add effects, or put it in a frame. When you’re done, you can send your picture back to an online photo account, save it to your desktop, email it, or print it. In short, Picnik acts like the Grand Central Station of the online photo world, effectively organizing traffic while providing a vital service. This breezy efficiency was especially impressive to the jurors. “It’s a scalpel, not a Swiss army knife,” Wickens said. “My mother could use it. Seven-year-olds could use it.” But Picnik has lots to offer experts as well. “If you’re familiar with Photoshop, it really cleans up those methods so nicely,” Vinh said. “It’s like, ‘Wow, I can’t believe I’ve been doing it that way for years and years.’ It’s a completely simple alternative.” For $25 a year, Picnik Premium offers an ad-free environment with more advanced editing tools, a full-screen mode, and (soon) professional font selections. But the site’s free, ad-supported services will more than meet the desires of most digital shutterbugs. “The bottom line is that it covers a need, and it’s accessible,” Pitaru concluded.

Design Picnik (Seattle): Peter Roman, designer; Darrin Massena, CTO; Jonathan Sposato, CEO; Brian Terry and Steve Leroux, Flex developers; Virginia Coldiron, copywriter

Blogniking

Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

The Point: Linking to some user-generated tutorial videos from Flickr user and Second Life tour de force Torley Linden, which included the line:

>”Makes you feel really good and makes you want to invest in their product!”

And from his blog post:

>I freshly upgraded to a Picnik Premium account. This US$25 investment was a no-brainer, considering how many right things they’ve got going for them. For one, their website design is exemplary, consistently-themed (grass & skies!), and helps you learn more about — and use! — the product without wasting time. From their uncanny ability to make forms simple and even (gasp!) enjoyable to fill out to how clear they communicate Picnik’s benefits, it’s a winner all-’round. >Picnik itself is fantastic: totally integrates with Flickr (altho you can upload images from your hard drive and other sources too), the effects enable you to get stunning results in just a few clicks, and it’s severely smile-inducing.

Read the original post: Blogniking