
Click the header at the top for your Webtoast Christmas Card. Special thanks to Grammy and Dove nominated Alan Villatoro of TVP and Alan Demafiles for his masterful animating skillz. The whole project took less than 16 hours from start to finish:
Hope you like it. Happy Christmas!

Just in time for the holidays, we have a special gift just for you, Mr. or Ms. Internet Browser person. We can't really tell you what it is because we want it to be a surprise but it includes graphics, video, music and singing. Hopefully we'll have it ready for you by tomorrow or something like that. Check back then.

We are thankful! Thanksgiving and Christmas are not just a time for turkey, ham, presents and drunk relatives. It's also when we start the crunch to get "everything" done before the end of the year. Business is good despite the dismal economy. We are thankful!
We got winter gear for our scooters - full face helmets, leather jackets, leather gloves, long johns, etc. That's right we'll still be riding...all year long! Well, Jeremiah won't be. He doesn't like two wheeled machines... or clowns. Butch is working on a couple of certifications for some new web technologies that will make things even better. We've got some big plans for future development. We're always thinking.
Thanks to our good friends at First Baptist Houston, Butch and his lovely wife went to see 'Celebration' their Christmas orchestra and choir program.The huge digital backdrops that Freddy created were awe inspiring and huge. Other recent projects include Christmas Cards for Laredo Construction, new logos for LYF, Oxford Street & Life Church of Miami, CD artwork for Hello Love and JJ Worthen, and new websites for SSI-Global, Houston Media Systems & Flourish Conference in Atlanta. Much more to come...
We just had the BYP office Christmas party at The Grove | Discovery Green and everyone at Webtoast won something- Thanks to our Bill Young Productions Family!
Finally, we want to express our most sincere thank you to all of our clients and friends. Some we have had for over five years now! May your holiday season be blessed. From Butch, Jeremiah, Michael, Karen and Freddy-- Happy Christmas!

The other day we had a meeting with Dave and he said that we shouldn't put pictures of us in the hospital because it makes us look like a sickly bunch. So, for the record, we're not sick. We just like to be real with people and let people know what's going on with us. Unfortunately big news for us sometimes involves powerful imagery. Perhaps its because we're creative and view the world through the beat of a different drummer. Either way, we will continue to show the world who we are. We are an open book. The good, the bad, and the sickly.
The holiday season is upon us. Here at Webtoast Media we celebrate Dia De Los Muertos. Just because it hasn't been overrun by commercialism. Check out the new header at the top of the page.
Coming up we have some cd artwork for a couple of independent artists. Some websites for the banking industry and internet radio. We also have a couple of website face lifts for an environmental group and a communications technology superstore. In addition we will be releasing a website and logo for a student ministry in Tomball, Texas and an religious environmental conference in Deluth, Georgia.
We recently did a Christmas card for an offshore platform company. We also did a couple of websites for a church and a couple of landscaping artists in Miami as well as a photographer in Texas.
_Ewing_Chris_14-07-1976_5.jpg)
Thank you to everyone for you prayers, phone calls, emails, texts, posts, food, and thoughts. I'm feeling much better. My radiation implant surgery went great as did the implant removal seven days later. Ocular Melanoma is not very common. In fact, only six people per million per year get diagnosed with it. I'm kind of a celebrity at Today's Vision. Freddy went there yesterday to get a routine eye exam and they remembered me by name and said that they have never actually seen an Ocular Melanoma case in real life before. So, I thought I would post the photo of my eye so that you could see something rare and unusual.

