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Question: If this were a step in a wordless-recipe, what would it mean to you?
Just wondering if this is pushing the envelope a little too far...
Comments
He he. Though I could figure it out
eventualy, it was not really that obvious.
--
Seen in Strange Things (? )
Posted 24 months ago.
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Thanks eismcsquare! Every bit of feedback
helps!
Posted 24 months ago.
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I got it straight away, but I am very
visually orientated (don't do words too
well!!) and I cook.
Posted 24 months ago.
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Break three eggs, separating the whites and
yolks into different mixing bowls. But then,
I'm the type who gets excited at holidays
when someone opens a gift that's
"assembly required" because I get
to put it together. It's a little obtuse.
The part that's confusing is the egg, half
white, and half yellow, with the dotted line
down the center - like an oragami folding
diagram. An image of cradling the yolk might
serve better. The three circles in the blue
half-oval could use some explanation too.
Break this into steps and show hands cradling
the yolks while the white falls in a bowl,
then dropping the yolk in another bowl.
Surround the whole thing with a box and put
the 3x outside the box.
Posted 23 months ago.
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Thanks for the advice TrombaMarina - all duly
noted!
Posted 23 months ago.
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I got it, but it took a second. I did not
realize at first that both bowls had egg in
them. I thought one was the egg and one was
the shell. I know, why would you put the
shell in a bowl, but that is what I thought.
I might step it out a little bit more. Have
breaking the egg be one step then seperating
the whites and the yolk as the second step.
Showing the egg like you did for the
chocolate cake receipe would have made things
clearer for me.
It really is a very clever method of
presentation. Kudos!
Posted 23 months ago.
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Knowing how to cook, you may want to put a
bowl with the whites and a smudge of yellow
and a big ole X over it ;-)
I also agree that you need a middle step
:-)
Posted 23 months ago.
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Break three eggs, separate whites and yolks
into separate bowls. (But I know a bit about
cooking.)
Posted 23 months ago.
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What you should do is show the egg as a cross
section. Don't show the half/half view with
the dotted line (that's not what an egg looks
like and the whites and yolk don't have equal
proprotions). Show the egg as it would look
if you cut it in half: the yolk rests near
the bottom of the egg. Then draw dotted lines
that run from the yolk to one bowl and from
the whites to another bowl.
What I first saw was "break a brown
egg in half and then cut it down the center.
Wait what?" Seriously that's what I
thought.
Posted 23 months ago.
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instead of a horizontal breakdown of the
actions, i believe it might work better in
this example if it was verticle.
It took me a while to get this one
Posted 23 months ago.
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Cheers all - I am developing these ideas and
more - stay tuned for more updates : D
Posted 23 months ago.
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I think my only problem with it would be
where the arrows originate from that are
going to each bowl. The one on the left
starts esentially where the whole egg is. I
think they should come from the splitting
egg. This would put them in the proper
sequential order.
Posted 22 months ago.
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I dont cook - I got it, crack 3 eggs and
seperate the yoke and the white in different
bowls yeah...? Wish my home economics
classes at school had been like this! I'd
have probably paid more attention and would
now be rivalling Gordon Ramsey with my
culinary skills (or maybe not)
Posted 18 months ago.
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Great work!
Posted 6 months ago.
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I got this alright but I was wondering if the
eggs were raw or cooked.
Cooked as for deviled eggs.....
Posted 2 months ago.
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