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Kindle Kreativity

My finished homemade cover and My kindle

When my Kindle arrived in the mail, covers for the newest version were not yet available. I was worried about protecting my Kindle especially when I carry it in my work bag, so I started Googling “Kindle covers.”

I found a lot of great information at mobilread.com and in the discussion forums at Amazon.com. I read a lot of reviews for purchased covers, and I found a lot of examples of homemade covers. Reading all of the information gave me a great overview of what features I might want in a cover like being able to fold the cover back and reach all of the buttons and plug-in areas.

I also found a great idea for a temporary cover — a padded envelope.

But one of my favorite finds was a post by C.E. Grundler who shared an idea for a great cover made for less than $7.

Inspired, I started searching my house looking for various materials to make my own homemade cover. Initially, I thought I might use bluejeans. I had found a cute cover that had the back pocket of a pair of jeans on the front of the cover, which would have been great to hold headphones and possibly the charger.

The supplies I gathered varied slightly from the supplies C.E.Grunger mentioned.

  1. A plastic accordion-style file
  2. Elastic cord from a name badge (the kind you get from a conference)
  3. Rubber cement
  4. sandpaper
  5. Velcro stips
  6. Iron-on adhesive
  7. An old mouse pad
  8. A colorful reusuable shopping bag
  9. A hole-punch
  10. Scrap of material/fabric
  11. An iron, pencil, scissors

My version allows me to have interchangable outer covers. Here you can see the outer cover on the left and the inside cover on the right. The two attach with Velcro.

When I started, I tried a variety of materials. I quickly decided against blue jeans because I wanted something light. I ended up using a colorful reusable shopping bag because it offered a bit of water-proofing. The shopping bag was originally a Fruit Loops bag with Toucan Sam and some recycle-friendly art. I selected parts of the bag that emphasized recycling and eliminated the references to the Toucan and Fruit Loops.

In the finished version, you can see a tiny bit of Toucan Sam, but it just looks like a colorful design on the very left of the front cover.

For the outer cover, I used an accordion folder that I already owned. The folder already had a great button/loop fastener, and by cutting down the folder to fit my Kindle, I was able to incorporate the button/loop fastener into my cover.

When cutting the accordion folder, I used my Kindle to help me determine the size. The scalloped edge prevented me from using the green flap, but I did use the area with the button and another section from the back of the folder to create the outer cover. This let me use the already existing latch system. I just needed to cut a tiny hole in the material to allow the button to go through.

As Grundler recommended, I sanded both pieces from the plastic accordion-file and used rubber cement to adhere the material, which was the recycled shopping bag.

The messy inside of my outside cover

When I went to connect the two sections, I realized the shopping bag material had plastic in it, which is probably why it is a bit water-proof. I had considered using the accordion flap to connect the front and back cover, but I didn’t feel like the rubber cement was secure enough. I needed a sturdier connection, so I thought of iron-on adhesive, but everything was plastic.

In order to be able to use the iron-on adhesive, instead of the accordion lid to connect the front and back cover, I used some blue canvas. When applying the iron-on adhesive, I had to be careful to keep from melting the plastic shopping bag material. To make sure it wasn’t a problem, I always placed paper towel in between the iron and the material I was ironing. The canvas “hinge” ended up being the perfect binding.

For the inside cover, I also used canvas. My son had a canvas organizer bin that had a wire frame, and the wire frame had become bent. Instead of throwing it all out, I recycled all of the canvas, which I used for this project. The bottom of the bin was sewn. One end of the sewn section was the perfect width for my inside cover, and I cut this sewn section down to create a pocket for my inside cover. This is what I used instead of the two-pocket folder.

The elastic string from the nametag was similar to this, but it was much longer.

Initially, I had intended to put the two-pocket folder inside this canvas pocket, but I forgot to do so as I became engrossed in securing my Kindle. I was really concerned about securing my Kindle inside the cover. Grundler used adhesive strips, and I initially considered using Velcro strips, but I didn’t like the idea of adhering anything to my Kindle. I did more searching, and I found some covers used four-corner fasteners, but some of the fasteners blocked some of the buttons and plug-in areas of the Kindle.

I ended up using an elastic string that I had as part of a name badge. I punched holes in a plastic sheet and threaded the elastic string through the plastic sheet, which provided sturdiness to the fastener.

The elastic from the name badge is threaded through hard plastic that is inside the canvas inside cover. It securely holds my Kindle in place.

At certain points, I had to thread the elastic through my inside cover. I used a hole punch to make the holes in the plastic and through my inside cover. I was so worried about getting the elastic tight enough and in the proper places. Although you can’t see it in this picture, there is a hard plastic piece inside this inside cover, which provides the stability needed to hold the elastic that holds my Kindle in place. The key is placing the elastic in an area that is smaller than the Kindle, so the stretched elastic will secure the Kindle. The inside cover is also where I positioned the elastic that goes around the outer button and holds my cover closed.

Once I had the elastic in the proper place, I sealed the inside cover using an iron and no-sew adhesive strips that bond with a bit of ironing. This is when I forgot to insert the plastic two-pocket folder and padding. I had planned on using a plastic two-pocket folder to provide a bit more sturdiness than a paper folder would allow. Instead of foam, I planned on using an old mouse pad to provide padding. When I threaded the elastic through the plastic and my inside cover, I completely forgot about the two-pocket folder and padding. I ended up liking my mistake. The canvas material was thick enough to provide enough stability, and it kept my cover from being too bulky.

My design lets me fold the front cover behind my Kindle, which gives me complete access to all of the buttons.

I really like the elastic fastener. It securely holds my Kindle in place, and it is also makes it easy to remove my Kindle from the cover. I like that I have the option to use my Kindle without a cover without being distracted by any attached adhesive fasteners.

There is only one flaw with my elastic fastener, and it is correctable. The bottom right corner tends to slip off. In the photo that shows my Kindle fastened in place, it is easy to see how close the bottom right elastic is to the edge of the Kindle. Looking at the photo that shows the placement of the elastic corners, I see the flaw that caused this tendency. For the other three corners, the elastic is about an inch and a half in length, but the elastic in bottom right corner is closer to an inch in length. That corner needed to be just a bit longer to prevent the elastic from slipping off.

To be clear, the corner doesn’t come off on its own. It usually only happens when my hand brushes against it, so it isn’t a security problem. I mention it only to help anyone who wants to use this type of fastener on their own homemade Kindle cover.

While the sealed inside cover looked nice enough to stand alone, it wasn’t thick enough to provide protection. It probably would have been if I had remembered to include the two-pocket folder and mouse pad. In the end, I’m glad I hadn’t remembered because the baby blue canvas lacked the design flair I had hoped to have in my Kindle cover. Still, the completeness of the inside cover made me rethink my plans for the final cover. I had initially thought I would seal the inside cover to the outside cover permanently, but I soon had other plans.

Fastening the inside cover to the outside cover is easy.

The great look of the inside cover and the need for a stronger adhesive made me realize I could make my cover design even more flexible. Instead of sealing the inside cover to the outside cover permanently, I ended up using Velcro. This meant I could keep the inside cover and develop several outside covers that I could switch as desired. Inspired, I placed Velcro on both covers and attached the two together.

There was an unexpected benefit to using Velcro and making the outer cover switchable: The outer cover wasn’t quite big enough to swing it back behind the Kindle, which was one of the options I wanted in a cover. But because the front cover was attached with Velcro, I was able to release the Velcro a tiny bit to allow me to swing the front cover back behind the Kindle and hold it one-handed with the cover still on. This gives me access to the buttons on both sides of the Kindle.

The finished project is light-weight and protects my Kindle well. I don’t miss the padding at all since the combined inside cover and outside cover provide enough padding.

While Grundler’s instructions specifically suggested rubber cement, I ended up not really liking rubber cement as an adhesive for this project. The biggest reason I didn’t like rubber cement was how messy it is. While you can rub the excess rubber cement off, it doesn’t always come off material cleanly. I found that when I tried, I ended up rubbing a bit of the material’s pattern off. Grundler actually ended up with a lot of feedback that suggested other adhesives including some scrapbooking materials. For me, I really ended up liking the combination between the iron-on adhesive and the Velcro.

To date, I haven’t made any other options for the outer cover, but I have plans to do so soon. In the meantime, I am enjoying my colorful cover that promotes recycling, which seemed to me to be the perfect theme for an electronic book cover. Save the trees!

Broke-e-did

And hopefully, it will soon be fix-e-did. My laptop. The one that my son spilled water on last December, and I bought a replacement keyboard that still didn’t work, so I used an external keyboard because it was the middle of a semester, and I could NOT switch computers.

And then the power cord died, and I bought a replacement cord. And for a long while it worked. Until a few weeks ago when it would randomly NOT work.

That is when I went from dreaming about a new laptop to actually purchasing one. I work online, and I needed a laptop I could depend on.

The kids were drooling over the thought of getting my old laptop. They envisioned filling it up with various Sims games and enhancement packs.

But I made them wait. I had important things on that there laptop that I needed to retrieve before handing it over to the children. And I managed to grab most of it before the laptop decided it would NOT work no matter what.

It has a short circuit in it somewhere, and I am not up to fixing that. So I broke down and took my laptop to a repair shop. I have two more laptops that could also be repaired, and depending how this one goes, I might take those too.

At the very least, I know I can get an external hard drive case and get everything I need off the laptop. But I’d like to have one that my kids can use too.

Mainly because that keeps them from bothering me when I’m working with comments like, “I need to see my Facebook,” or “Will you Google something for me?”

Because the desktop computer is busy playing Sims.

In the meantime, I am busy learning Windows 7 AND Office 2010 in order to be ready for the fall semester.

Messy, Messy, Messy

I realized this morning that my online life was very very messy. It took a phone call from my website’s abuse department, which was a scary phone call before 9 a.m. (although this phone call would be scary at any time).

Apparently, someone took advantage of my messy online life and created some very authentic looking web pages in order to phish account information from unsuspecting people. The pages appeared on my web site. They wanted to know if I could please delete the offending files. They were actually pretty nice about it, and the default setting wasn’t “You are guilty” but “You are a victim too.” Whew.

The suggestion was that if I was hosting a blog, my blog application was out of date, which would make my site vulnerable. I immediately logged into my blog and confirmed that I was using the latest application.

It wasn’t until I opened up the screenshot sent to me as well as my FTP that I realized it wasn’t my current blog that was the problem. It was one that I still had that was now just a redirect to the current blog. I hadn’t logged into that blog account since I combined all of my blogs into one spot and changed the name to Digital Rhetoric. And that meant that blog’s software wasn’t updated to the latest and greatest.

When I first did the redirect, I deleted all of my FTP and photo and teaching blog stuff, which left a messy “file not found” problem for the pages within those blogs. And that is when I realized I could just use a redirect, so that is what I did for my lindasherwood.com blog. And it was the lindasherwood.com blog that phishers used to create the fake pages.

The first email notifying me of the problem was sent to me at 11 a.m. yesterday. Of course, I hadn’t read my email yet. If I hadn’t got the phone call this morning, I’m not sure I would have realized it today. Or more likely, I wouldn’t have realized it until after I left the house and didn’t have the means to fix it until I returned home later today.

And as I was going through my various files for lindasherwood.com, I realized that the background stuff of my web site is very very messy. I installed WordPress in 2009, and I made my site function using blog software then. Before that, I had a regular web site with lots of pages, and you can still see some of those pages by typing the URL directly: www.lindasherwood.com/portfolio.html I had forgotten that web site version was even still available! And most of the links still work.

So, in an effort to clean up my website, I have deleted a bunch of files this morning. And in doing so, I made my main page, lindasherwood.com not work. I’ll fix it later. The important part is that I also got rid of the phishing pages.

This is also why my site’s main page: lindasherwood.com isn’t working right now.

And here is a couple of links about phishing that was sent to me by my hosting site’s abuse department:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phishing
http://www.antiphishing.org/

Have you cleaned up your website lately?

Category: Freelance Writing Tips, Web/Tech, Weblogs  Tags: , ,  Comments off

Unintentionally Censored

I have not blogged in forever, and it is not totally my fault. Admittedly, at first, I did not blog because I was doing things like reading real books and spending time with family, but in the last few days it was more because my laptop is broken.

My son, lovely and 10 years old as he is, was allowed to use my laptop. I was on my way somewhere when he asked to use a computer, and my computer was on, and I had a moment of stupidity, and said, Sure, use this one.

It was at least an hour before he called my cell phone to tell me my keyboard wasn’t working right. I was in denial. I told him to turn off my computer and leave it alone. I secretly hoped a reboot would be enough.

Later, I asked if he spilled anything on my laptop, and he denied it. I was busy doing other things, so it was a while before I went to use my laptop. When I picked it up, liquid dripped from it. I opened it up to notice all of this condensation all over the screen. Clearly, something had been spilled on it.

I dried everything off, removed the battery and power cord and used hubby’s laptop to look up possible solutions. When I rebooted my computer (after more than 24 hours), it worked except there were a few problems with the keyboard.

Specifically four keys were not working right. The T will not work at all. The d, h and g are lonely and can no longer stand alone. D is now forever “ds.” H and G are now hgd and ghd for some reason I cannot phathom.

I started looking up alternatives, and I was coming to the realization that I am not ready to part with my computer. I like it.

I did, however, find a new replacement keyboard on eBay that will fit my laptop, and I am hoping it will work. It was just $15.95 with free shipping, which is a lot better than buying a new laptop.

I am using an external keyboard with my laptop, which is a pain. So I haven’t been online very much, and I type even less.

And today, I grounded the middle child from her laptop, and I forced her to type in her password so I could use it. The keyboard is tiny, so I am still not typing well, but it is better than alternatives. I hope the new keyboard arrives soon. :)

Retreat!

I am leaving in a little over four hours to go on a weekend retreat with 5 other women. It is a “web presence” retreat where we will work on the website for Ferris’ Crossroads Writing Project. It should be pretty fun, but it will be a lot of work as well. I am taking my laptop, so I will probably be online off and on throughout the weekend.

It has been a rainy week here in Michigan, and most Little League games continue on. Yesterday, Autumn and Amanda played ball in Rose City, which is about an hour drive from our home. We arrived back home around 9:40 p.m. The kid went right to sleep though, so they didn’t have any problems waking up this morning. I think all four of them were tired out.

There are just 5 days left of school for the kids.

My mom keeps trying to get me to commit to some events happening in June. I already have enough of my own events going on in June (including another retreat!), and I am being hesitant about committing to anything else. There is one thing I’d like to go to (my aunt and uncle are celebrating their 50th anniversary June 20), but I thought it was on a Sunday, which I can do, but it is on a Saturday, so I’m not sure.

The following weekend is the 75th Morey Reunion, but it is also the time we are going on vacation. I don’t think I’ll make it to the reunion, but my mom might end up taking the kids (or at least some of them). Then July 5, Amanda goes to camp.

May is quickly coming to an end, and it looks like June will be just as busy. It is a good thing that I am starting out with a retreat! I plan to have fun and laugh a lot. ;-)

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