If you’re a new TpT seller looking for advice in the Seller’s Forum, you’ll notice a recurring them: clipart. More specifically, you’ll hear people suggest that you invest in good clipart. I concur, with some reservations. When it comes to Teachers Pay Teachers, the bottom line is this: quality content sells…but only if it’s packaged well. Teachers can’t view your whole product before purchasing, so a good cover and preview suggests something about the quality of the content. Here are my three recommendations for finding clipart. One is free, one is paid, and one can be accessed through a free trial. This is not a sponsored post. Purchase a Clipart…
-
-
A Non-Designers Guide to Creating a Simple Brand for Teachers Pay Teachers (Steps 1-3)
Branding isn’t just for hardcore TpT sellers, it’s for everyone. Here’s why simple brand can benefit you, even if you’re a novice TpT seller: With a brand, you’re never starting from scratch. When you create new resources you already have fonts, colors, and templates picked out. A brand makes your resources stand out. You want buyers to recognize your logo, colors and cover designs. A brand makes your store look cohesive. That being said, here are three posts to get you started: First, choose a color palette. Next, choose a font family. Finally, create a template for product covers. Voila! You’re a TpT pro.
-
A Regular Person’s Guide to Creating a TpT “Brand,” Step 3: Create a Template for Product Covers
Now that you’ve chosen a color palette and a font family, you’re ready to create a template for product covers. Creating product covers has been challenging for me. I feel more confident creating resources than I do with the packaging (I’m not a designer!). I used to start from scratch each time I designed a cover. Now, I use a simple template for most of my covers. It looks something like this: This template gives me space for a title, a subtitle, and an image. The two text boxes prevent me from squishing as many words as possible onto the cover. Here’s how some of the finished products look: How…
-
A Summer To-Do List That Honors Meaning Over Accomplishment
I love a good to-do list. Checking that box is satisfying, but sometimes the journey there is arduous and the result is…not worthwhile. A rigid to-do list quickly becomes arbitrary, something you complete because you said you would, not because it furthers your goals. Have you ever stared at the blank page (or newly-drawn bullet journal template) and packed it full just for the heck of it? Sometimes the unexamined thought going through my head is “What’s the absolute most I can accomplish next week?” rather than, “How can I pursue my most meaningful goals and simultaneously honor my values?” For teachers, the summer is a combination of much-needed respite…