Scout Books: Little Books for Big Ideas

Recently a friend introduced me to these rad little books called Scout Books. In a nutshell, they’re small notebooks made in the USA from recycled paper and they’ve got style. Your style.
See, these little books can feature your cover design or even custom designed interior pages (up to 32). I can think of a few great ways to use these:
- Camp booklets
- Ministry brochures
- Branded notebooks
- Promotional piece
- Calendar with coming events
What would you use these for? Let us know in the comments.
The iPad, A Staggering Work of Obviousness
Sometimes I come across a blog post that is not only informative and inspiring, but also just plain well written and entertaining to read. This is one such post.
What The Church Can Learn From Canabalt

If you’ve been following me on Twitter, you might have noticed me tumbling to my death or being blown into a fine mist every now and then. The source of my destruction is a very simple game called Canabalt. In a nut shell, Canabalt is a game where the goal is to jump from roof top to roof top for as long as possible before dying. Only one button is used to jump. That’s it.
It’s a simple game with simple mechanics, simple graphics, and a killer soundtrack. And, like most things I come across, I believe the church can learn a few things from Canabalt and its developers.
1. It doesn’t have to take 7 months to execute a good idea.
Canabalt was created in seven days! I’ll let someone else talk about how important building the right team, communicating effectively, and managing milestones is to pulling something like this off, but if you aren’t starting with a good idea, you may just be spinning your wheels.
I once attended a film production weekend workshop where the speaker, an eccentric character, told a story about how he had all these people telling him about their screenplays. He’d hear stuff like,
“I’m a screenwriter! I’ve been working on my screenplay for four years and I’m almost to the third act!”
His response to this was something along the lines of,
“Four years! Whatever you’ve been doing for the last four years, it hasn’t been writing.”
He went on to say that if you have a good story, three weeks of solid writing should get the job done.
Think about that the next time you’re dreaming up new ways to implement technology in your ministry or working on the new church web site design.
2. Simple is good.
When Canabalt was built for the Kyles’ Experimental Gameplay Project, the theme for that month was “bare minimum.” In an interview the games’s creator, Adam Atomic, says he had just finished revisiting Super Mario Brothers for the NES and realized that,
“You pretty much hold right and B, and hit A at the right time to hop obstacles.”
The game he came up with took the best things from Super Mario Brothers and condensed it into an easy to pick-up-and-play game. Brilliant! But what can the curch take away from this?
Take a walk through your church’s bulletin. Is it simple? Does it clearly communicate what the intent of the church is? Do the events and programs promoted in the bulletin coincide with that intent or is it just a bunch of fluff and stuff to keep your church members busy?
When I’m playing Super Mario, like Adam, I’m enjoying my run the most when I ignore the Goombas and Koopas, pay no attention to the power-ups, and simply run for my life towards the flag at the end, getting there as fast as possible. Chew on that metaphor for a minute!
3. You don’t need a huge budget to do things well.
One of Canabalt’s best features is its sound design. In the previously linked to interview, it is mentioned that many of these sound effects were recorded on the built-in mic of a laptop! Amazing!
You may not have the best equipment or the biggest budget, but with a little resourcefulness and know-how, you can still do it well.
4. Don’t betray your mission.
The creator of Canabalt says,
“…it makes a lot of sense to start with something simple, purify it, then figure out how you can expand on it within your time limits and budget without betraying it or messing it up.”
I couldn’t agree more. We often heap so many features, ideas, words, images, etc. into what we are working on that we lose sight of the original goal.
5. Observe, adjust and repeat for maximum awesome.
Canabalt takes advantage of something called “procedurally generated content.” In a nut shell, the game is constantly monitoring how you are playing the game and then adjusts the game so that the next obstacle provides the best balance of fun and challenge. Genius!
By constantly observing, adjusting and repeating the process, we could maximize our effectiveness in and outside the church.
How effectively does your communications team handle incoming projects? Get feedback from your team and those who work with them. Adjust. Observe. Get more feedback! Do the same for all communication vehicles, small groups, visitor relations (great source of feedback there), anywhere!
By the way, go play Canabalt. It’s a good time.
“It’s better for a church to be a “branded house” than a “house of brands.”
How InDesign and GREP Help Me Blast Through the Sunday Bulletin
Each week I am responsible for laying out the weekend bulletin at Henderson Hills. Once I get all of the copy laid out in InDesign CS3, I print a few proofs off for the communications team to proof read. Then I collect the revised copies and make the changes. One of the most frustrating things about editing the copy of the bulletin is that I seem to make the same corrections each week. We don’t have a very strict style guide at HHBC, but we do try to stay consistent with how we format dates and times, URLs, phone numbers, etc.
Before having the responsibility of the bulletin each week, I rarely used page lay-out software, the last of which was an archaic version of Pagemaker running on MacOS 8. I don’t know all there is to InDesign, but over the last few weeks I have focused on learning something new each week about the features and capabilities of InDesign. One day, while finding and replacing some text, I happened upon the GREP tab.
What is GREP?
GREP stands for Global Regular Expression Print. Makes perfect sense, right? You can read more about it here, but really all you need to know is that GREP is what would happen if Find-And-Replace finally got off of his lazy bum and went to the gym. GREP allows you to search for specific patterns in your text and manipulate the text in powerful ways.
GREP does not look like find-and-replace. It looks like this:
Find: \(?(\d\d\d)\)?[-.\s~~]?(\d\d\d)[-.\s~~]?(\d\d\d\d)
Change to: ($1)~S$2~~$3
That gem of confusion up there allows you to search for U.S. phone numbers in almost any format, and replace them with numbers in the format (800) 555-1212 with a non-breaking space after the area code and a non-breaking hyphen before the last four digits. That’s cool because I am constantly having to reformat phone numbers in the text that I am given. Over the past 3 weeks I’ve been able to find or write GREP strings (that’s what those lines of weird are called) that let me:
- Reformat phone numbers
- Remove mailto links (for some reason Entourage adds mailto links to all email addresses in plain text emails, where I get the copy)
- Keep all URLs and email addresses from breaking over two lines
- Change — and - to proper em-dashes
- Place one space between sentences (instead of two)
- Change all single and double quotes to typographer’s quotes
Some of these I found on Google, some are included in InDesign, some I modified from other examples. I now run these before I send the proofs out and it is saving me time. It takes seconds for InDesign to do the work for me.
There are other things I am hoping to figure out how to do with GREP or maybe even find-and-replace if it is capable. For example, certain words and places in our bulletin are always capitalized, certain phrases need to be changed depending on context (click on www.hhbc.com should read visit hendersonhills.com), days need to read how they are sounded out (August 22 should read August 22nd), commas between days of the week and the date, etc.
I thought I might be able to use a Mac OSX’s Automator to accomplish this, however, from what I have read, I think I could accomplish it all whithin InDesign with the right GREP strings and some JavaScript. Also, if I am understanding correctly, InDesign CS4 let’s me manipulate paragraph styles (another handy feature for speeding things up) using GREP. When I upgrade and if I am ever able to automate enough changes that the only changes made in proofs are for content, not style, I will let you know.
If you’re curious about any of the strings that I am using, leave a comment. Otherwise, check these links out:
- GREP in InDesign CS3 (eBook)
- GREP in InDesign CS3 (another eBook)
- GREP Searches in InDesign CS3 (more great links here)
Do you want fries with that logo?
Designers are sometimes faced with having to complete design jobs with impossible deadlines. I beleive that for designers working in ministry, this scenario plays out much more often. This post from Smashing Magazine offers some handy advice for dealing with it all.
Freebie: Icon Template
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Yesterday I needed to create a new Flickr icon for our row of social media links at hendersonhills.com. I decided to go ahead and create it in Illustrator so that I had a nice crisp vector when I needed it. I also created it in such a way that I can change what the icon is for pretty quickly.
I’m making the Illustrator (CS4) file available just in case any of you could find it useful.
Oh yes! This church is doing a Christian Symposium on aliens! I’ve been bugging my pastor to do something like this for years and have not been taken seriously but I think it is an interesting subject. C.S. Lewis’s Space Trilogy, anyone?
This logo is fantastic! I love the alpha-omega monogram and the seven orbs above the UFO.
I swear to you, as I was looking at this I thought, man this is awesome, I like it more than Von Glitschka’s Astronaut Jesus logo. Then I saw on Flickr that he did this piece as well. Nice work!
Ancient of Days Logo (via Glitschka Studios)
I’ve created an iPhone version of Henderson Hills Baptist Church’s website. I think it works well with the aesthetic of the original site. The site is run on SkyCMS and is super easy to keep updated.
While developing this website, I created a grid template in Photoshop to help me lay things out. If you’re interested in downloading the PSD for your own iPhone related projects, let me know!




