Problem: Write an article based on this summary: Brush your base color onto your entire lid. Add shadow along the outer part of your crease. Blend Dab a small amount of highlighter under your eyebrow arch and at the inner corner of your eye. Apply eyeliner. Brush on mascara. Finished.

Answer: Load an eyeshadow brush with your chosen base color. Tap the side of your brush to remove excess powder. With your eye closed, brush the color onto your entire lid using light strokes. It's ok if you go a little above your crease. Reload your brush as needed. Load a small angled brush with your chosen shadow color. Tap your brush to remove excess powder. Starting from the outer corner of your eye, run the angled brush along your crease. Stop just before you reach the inner corner of your eye. Do this with one long stroke. The end result should be a highly pigmented outer corner and a gradient towards a much lighter inner corner. the eyeshadows. Use a clean blending brush. Make small, circular "buffing" motions with the brush along the line where the two colors meet. Start from your inner corner and work your way across to the opposite side. Do this until the two eyeshadows have blended together seamlessly. Your eyelid should now look airbrushed and very close to how a shadow would natural fall. Use a clean eyeshadow brush. Dot a tiny bit of your highlight color at the inner corner of your eye and directly under the point of your eyebrow's arch. Use a clean, preferably small, blending brush to blend your highlighter into the surrounding area. Eyeliner will accentuate your beautiful brown eyes. However, eyeliner is the trickiest type of makeup to put on when you're going for a natural look. Which eyeliner styles look natural will depend on a combination of your eyelash color and your eyes' shade.  If your hair is light, consider minimal eyeliner. The easiest way to achieve this to make a very thin line across your upper lashline. For an even more subtle, natural look apply liner between each individual lash instead of drawing on a line.  If your hair is dark, you can use either a minimalist technique or a slightly thicker line. A thicker line will bring more attention to your brown eyes, but a thinner one will look more natural. If both your eyes and hair are very dark, you can try a subtle winged or "cat eye" eyeliner in addition to any of the above methods. At the outer corner of your eye, continue your eyeliner slightly at an upward angle pointing to the end of your eyebrow. Match the thickness of this line to the rest of your eyeliner. Small wings will create the illusion of an extended lashline. Finishing your eye makeup will help your brown eyes look even more beautiful. However, like eyeliner, this is another step where it's easy to overdo it. If you're worried about looking too done up, consider skipping this step. Otherwise, go over your upper lashes just once or twice with the mascara color best suited to your look.


Problem: Write an article based on this summary: Create a new document. Set the background color. Create a new layer. Add your logo. Add your company or website name. Add extra elements. Clean it up.

Answer: Define your banner size: there are a number of standard banner sizes. For our purposes, we'll focus on a standard "full banner" size: 468 pixels by 60 pixels: Note: this is a standard size, but it's not a requirement. If your needs and requirements call for other dimensions, let that be your guide. Fill the background layer with a color that compliments your website design.  Click on the Foreground Color to bring up the Color Picker, and select your fill color. With the Paint Bucket tool, fill background layer of the banner with your chosen color. We are going to fill this with a richer color to help set off the text and logo. We want it to be proportional to the size of the banner, and centered.  In the new layer, create a selection that is somewhat smaller than the original banner, and fill it with the desired color. Center the filled area. Select the entire layer by pressing CTRL-A (PC) or Command-A (Macintosh). From the Layer menu, select Align Layers to Selection > Vertical Centers. Repeat this step but select Horizontal Centers. This will center the contrast layer horizontally and vertically. Open your logo file, copy it, and paste it into your banner document where it will appear as a new layer. Resize it as necessary to fit. Press CTRL-T on a PC, or Command-T on a Macintosh, and use the handles to resize the document as necessary, using the shift key on the handles to resize proportionally. Select the text tool, pick your desired font, and type it in. If it's not the right size, adjust as necessary, as described in the previous step. Sometimes, a logo and name is enough. Other times, adding some lines and ornaments will add the needed interest to your banner. Create a new layer to do this so that you can make any adjustments necessary without disturbing other layers. Fine tune the placement of logo and title, and any extra elements, and then save your banner.


Problem: Write an article based on this summary: Create a biography page for each of your characters. Add general details about each character to their specific biography pages. Describe the physical appearance of your characters. Consider your characters quirks and flaws. Start thinking more in-depth about each character’s personality. Tie the characters deeper motivations and thoughts into their shallower characteristics.

Answer:
On each page, create a category for “name,” “date of birth,” “height,” “physical characteristics,” “favorite food,” “favorite time of day,” and so on. Write the name of a character at the top of each page. Fill in the blanks for each character. Note whether each one is a minor or major character, and how they relate to one another in the story. Draw a family tree if you need help keeping all of the characters straight. Don’t forget to include diversity in your characters. Your characters should reflect real life in age, race, sexuality, gender, size, etc. Maybe they never shut the kitchen cabinets. Maybe they always hang up before saying “I love you.” Maybe they sing in the car, but never in front of people. Maybe they eat a bit too much cheese, and spend an entire paycheck in the cheese section of Whole Foods. What does your character fear? Maybe he doesn’t like spiders, or he’s afraid of the water. What motivates her? What keeps her awake at night? Maybe she can’t sleep because she always dreams of black cats. What makes him cry? What makes his heart stop beating for a moment? What’s his favorite china pattern? What does he want most in life? Where is her favorite place in the world? What medications does she take? For instance, what do her scars or tattoos say about her past? Maybe she got a tattoo that reminds her of a favorite pet that died. Why are his eyes brown? Maybe they’re his grandmother’s eyes, and he shares a passion for painting with her. When or why did she decide she liked strawberry-rhubarb pie? Maybe it was her mom’s favorite, who died when she was a kid. Why does she like mornings? Maybe that was the only time she really got to spend with her mom. Continue to dig. Ask “why” to every characteristic. Why is he afraid of spiders? Why does she dream about black cats? Write down the potential answers on your character’s biography page.