Archive for November, 2004


Practical Colour Usage in Website Designs: Colour Schemes and Themes

Monday, November 29th, 2004

We’re surrounded by colour. While this statement is self-evident, what isn’t always so obvious is how designers combine those colours. Whether a designer is creating a website, a paint job for a racing car, or textiles for curtains, they follow certain formulas to match up their colours. These schemes are time-honoured tools to help designers create certain moods and to generate actions from their customers.

In this article, Linda gives practical advice about how to create these colour schemes with the combined use of one online and one print colour tool.

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Award Winning Websites, or Arbitrary Awards?

Monday, November 15th, 2004

There are millions of sites on the Web and plenty of designers as well. How can you help your design talents stand out from the crowd?

Well the Webby Awards, one of the few truly recognizable and sought-after web design awards, recognizes outstanding web sites in over 60 categories. Their final deadline for submission for the 9th Annual Webby Awards is December 17, 2004. Also. for the first time this year, sites that don’t make the cut for Webby Nominee or Webby Winner are eligible to receive special recognition from the Academy as Webby Worthy.

Did you design a website within this past year that you feel is worth the $95 - $195 entry fee? If not, then why not? Linda Goin asks herself that same question, as she looks at some of the past Webby Award winners and talks about what makes a Webby Winner, or any other web-design winner for that matter.

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B.F.A. or J.O.B.? Training as a Designer

Monday, November 8th, 2004

In this series of articles we’ve seen lots about design theories and concepts – elements, principles, colour, typography… For some people those articles, and the links contained therein, may have provided the guidance and inspiration they need. Others though, may have felt their creative juices reinvigorated and last week’s mention of universities (through the dissection of some of their web site colours, navigation, and design consistency) could have stimulated an interest in how to gain a more thorough training in design … and perhaps even a qualification.

Even if you never want to step foot in a school again, you may want to stay informed about your competition. In both cases, a good look at what schools expect, and the work their students produce, is a great way to stay on top of changes in the industry.

Here Linda Goin gives you her advice about design schools based on her personal experience gained during her quest for higher education, with a focus on identifying schools that may suit your career aspirations.

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Professional Sites, Unprofessional Design Choices: Colour, Direction, and Continuity in Web Design

Monday, November 1st, 2004

When a viewer approaches a professional business on the web, he or she usually expects a professional site complete with colour schemes and links that work and pages that seem to belong together.

While most of these design issues, like colour, direction (as in navigation), and website design continuity seem mundane and of little concern for most designers (we CAN use templates to produce design continuity, after all…), it seems that not everyone keeps their eyes on the ball.

In this article Linda Goin takes a quick trip through some academic related web sites and, unlike previous web site analyses (Learn Through Better Deconstruction I and Learn Through Better Deconstruction II: Testing and Training Your “Designer’s Eye”), highlights the not so good as well as the not too shoddy. Linda even finds time to deliver a fashion tip, and point out that elements of the images we use can, maybe unconsciously, indicate the ethos of our organisation.

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