Easy Peasy Facebook Covers
How would you like a fancy cover for your Facebook Timeline? It's the easiest thing to do. No resizing, no templates, no messing around.
There is lots of advice about this in the scrapbooking world, most of it ridicuslouly over-complicated. It doesn't need to be.There are templates out there if you want to use them - you use them like quickpages - but you don't need them at all. You just need some common sense.
Imagine you are a normal person. A non-scrapbooker. That thing your family would like you to be! Click on the bottom right of your Facebook cover. It invites you to change the cover. What does it do then? It invites you to choose a photo.
Choose a photo.
Not set up custom size in MMS/Photoshop. Not use a template. Not resize anything.
Choose a photo.
So it stands to reason that any photo will do. After all, the normal people in the world don't have digi scrapping layouts. They have a photo.
Facebook resizes the photo to get the size it wants. Just as it will resize your layout. Ah, but, you say, it needs a certain shape. No, it doesn't. A certain part of the layout will show but you get to move it up and down to choose the part you want. So what you need - and all you need - is a regular layout where the photos or other bits you want are in about 25% of the page. White space scrappers rejoice!
Now is the time to take a look at my cover layouts HERE. What do you see? Square layouts apart from one - the bunny one - which was a desktop layout. Here's a tip - collect free desktop pages when you see them!
Some of them lend themselves to being a Facebook cover without any tweaking, like the Connie Prince Swim On one with photos of us jumping into a pool. The family tree ones are adaptations of pages I was making anyway for our family tree site. No time was wasted with tutorials and templates. I have tried the 851 x whatever templates but on my big monitor they look fuzzy. This suggests Facebook is doing something clever with its own resizing. Well done, though, those designers who offer them as freebies. It's good marketing.
Step by step, then:
1) Choose one layout you've already done where the bits you want are in about 25% of the page. They don't all have to be in a line. Don't worry, you don't have to use this as a FB cover. Unless it looks brilliant!
2) Start a new Facebook album called Facebook Cover Layouts or something to make it obvious it's not going to be your kids round the Christmas tree. MAKE THIS ALBUM PUBLIC. This is important because it's where your designer credits will be seen. Later on you will have several cover layouts in here and you can change your cover whenever you want.
3) Add your layout. IMMEDIATELY go onto your timeline and click on the menu arrow to the right of the photo. HIDE IT from your timeline or you will confuse your friends. You can upload your original 3600 x 3600 if you want to then go and make a coffee as it will take a while to upload. I save 1200 x 1200 versions of most of my pages for online sharing so I use that.
4) Go to Change Cover on your cover and select the photo. You will see that FB has reduced the size so that the full width of your layout shows. Click on Reposition Photo as slide it up and down until you get the bit you like. Does it look fantastic? Then hit SAVE. If it doesn't then don't save it. You are only doing this for practice.
Easy huh?
Now go through your layouts and see if you have any that would be good for your FB cover. If not, open a regular 12 x 12 page and start creating. You can put all your elements top of bottom or you can make a clever arty page with stuff in one corner too. Have fun. Don't forget the designer credits. Add them to the page itself (you can see where I've done that) or type them into the box when you upload the page on Facebook.
See? No need for resizing. No need for templates!
Making a Facebook Cover in Picmonkey
The correct size and resolution for a Facebook cover is one of the pre-set crop functions in Picmonkey so you can create a Facebook cover from any layout or photo. This method is ideal if you're nervous about uploading your "full" layout to Facebook or you only want people to see the cut down version.
For more details on cutting down layouts generally see the Picmonkey resizing tutorial HERE but basically you choose the crop size, adjust the box so that you get the part of the layout you want and then save it and upload to Facebook. You will get a better result every time if you create your layout full size THEN use Picmonkey to crop it. Your Picmonkey screen looks like this:
Making FB Covers from Scratch In Picmonkey
You can also use Picmonkey collages to make Facebook covers. This will be covered in a later tutorial.
Using Pho-to Montages
Go to www.funny.pho.to.com to make some fun montages which you can then cut down in Picmonkey, like this one. It looks best if your profile photo is the same on you use to make the cover.
Here's a slideshow of a few Facebook covers I've used: