Weird Harold
Opinionated Old Fart
- Joined
- Mar 1, 2000
- Posts
- 23,768
I know that there are many more tricks for self-editing and proofreading your own work than the advice I gave Bonnie.
So share what works for you to avoid that feeling of horror when your sory posts and there are half a dozen flashing neon errors in the first screen of your story.
(Advice cross-posted from Bonnie's thread on setting a scene.)
Everybody has that blind spot and it requires some effort to overcome it without a second set of eyes to spot them.
There are several tricks to make the errors stand out as if you had already posted the story, but the simplest is the same thing that makes them noticeable after posting -- make your story look different than when you originally typed it (or last edited it.)
You can change the font, font size, margins, background color, text color, or any combination therof but changing the look releases your mind from the preconception that it knows what's on the screen because it knows what it told your fingers to type.
Additonally, when you do your final proofread, start with the last paragraph and proofread each paragraph independently from back to front.
So share what works for you to avoid that feeling of horror when your sory posts and there are half a dozen flashing neon errors in the first screen of your story.
(Advice cross-posted from Bonnie's thread on setting a scene.)
Seeing the story posted, the spelling, dropped words, and gramatical mishaps positively leap off the page at me. Why couldn't I see them before? I SWEAR they weren't there when I posted! Anyone else have that same kind of blind spot before submitting,
Everybody has that blind spot and it requires some effort to overcome it without a second set of eyes to spot them.
There are several tricks to make the errors stand out as if you had already posted the story, but the simplest is the same thing that makes them noticeable after posting -- make your story look different than when you originally typed it (or last edited it.)
You can change the font, font size, margins, background color, text color, or any combination therof but changing the look releases your mind from the preconception that it knows what's on the screen because it knows what it told your fingers to type.
Additonally, when you do your final proofread, start with the last paragraph and proofread each paragraph independently from back to front.