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CSS Design: Baker Associates

July 25, 2010 08:00:00

One of the nicer and more unique corporate sites I have seen in a long time.

I love the look and feel of this site. The layout, colors, typography and photography all flow really well together.





This design was featured on the 25th July 2010 . It falls under the category of Corporate, and has a layout style of Other.

If youd like, you can visit this site, or view all our other featured designs.



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Mobile WordPress Theming: Day 1

July 24, 2010 19:38:40

” In this series, we will create a powerful mobile WordPress theme that anyone can apply to their blog to make their site easily accessible to mobile users.”

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Free Full Layered Facebook GUI PSD Kit

July 24, 2010 18:37:50

“The main idea behind the kit is to speed up the prototyping of Facebook application UIs and Facebook fan pages, thus sparing you from drawing all the comps and letting you customize all the texts, buttons and data as you need. ”

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A Mild Case of Borderitis

July 24, 2010 17:37:41

An excellent examination of how the use of borders can easily get out of control.

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Web Design Critique #9: Wallpapa

July 24, 2010 15:18:38

Every week we take a look at a new website and analyze the design. We’ll point out both the areas that are done well as well as those that could use some work. Finally, we’ll finish by asking you to provide your own feedback.

Today’s site is Wallpapa, a site offering free desktop wallpaper downloads.

If you’d like to submit your website to be featured in a future Design Critique, it just takes a few minutes. We charge $24 for critiquing your design – considerably less than you’d pay for a consultant to take a look at your site! You can find out more here.

Wallpapa

“We love high quality images and cool desktop wallpapers. On the Internet there are many sites that can help solve this problem, but all of them have some shortcomings. We have designed and produced a convenient, versatile and of course a useful service, which we hope you approve. To achieve our goals, we looked at the problem from both sides. From the artists who want to share their work with other people and get feedback, as well as from the users who also are concerned about our problem.”

Here’s the home page of the site:

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First Impressions

Overall, Wallpapa is not a bad looking site. The name is catchy, the basic design is nice and bright and minimal enough to place emphasis on the thumbnails.

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There are plenty of obvious ways to search for wallpapers such as the search bar and categories in the header and the tag cloud in the footer. There are even some more advanced options like searching by color or device (iPhone, iPad, etc.)

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Alignment

As I look around the site the key mistake that I notice is poor alignment. The page is trying to be center aligned, but everything is slightly off. If the grid is the main center of balance, then anything that hangs off the left should equally hang off the right. The screenshot below shows how this is simply not the case.

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Alignment issues like the one above can be seen all across the page and should be adjusted if the center alignment is to be honored.

Now with that said, I rarely agree with center justifying all the content on a page. In basic design theory you learn that center alignments are the weakest, mostly because there’s no hard solid edge for your eyes to follow.

That doesn’t mean center alignments should never be used, just that they should be applied carefully. In my opinion, center alignments work best when you have a large page and very little to place on it. This however is a fairly content heavy page and could use a little more structure.

If you do change the alignment, find one and stick to it. By this I mean apply it to the categories, the header elements, the tags, the extra footer content; all of it.

Hover Effects

When you hover over a thumbnail, the preview is blacked out and you are given a link to download the image. It’s a nice effect but the link only applies to the little snippet at the bottom of the thumbnail, not the entire picture area.

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This is a bit confusing and bad for usability. Users will expect to be able to click the thumbnail of the image they want to see, being forced to hunt for the right place to click is a quick way to get them to move on to a different site.

The Big Picture

The suggested changes above are fairly minor, but I think there’s a much larger problem here regarding how the content on the site is presented.

When a user visits this site for the first time, they are given a bunch of thumbnails and tags. From the name of the site and the page title (which many users are likely to miss) they have to interpret exactly what’s going on and what you want them to do.

As designers we often think that some things are so obvious they don’t need to be said. However, our viewpoint is completely biased because we are the ones creating the site. In this case, the designer probably said something like “well any idiot can see that it’s a wallpaper site!” But that’s not the point.

Just because a user can figure out what the site is doesn’t mean they should be forced to. Hitting them over the head with a plain and simple statement is a tried and true marketing method. If you’re offering free wallpaper downloads, your site should say it loud and proud.

Furthermore, I don’t think that it’s ideal that the first thing you see are thumbnails. This feels like a content page, not a welcome page. This makes it feel like you’re walking into the middle of something rather than starting at the beginning.

The thumbnails also provide a page with no clear focus. Again, this is fine for a content page but not for a welcome page. You want something to suck in users and make them stick around. You’ve typically only got about a second to convince a user that your site is what they want. If nothing grabs their attention within that second, they’ll move right on to their next open tab.

The Solution

Since this site’s primary focus is attractive imagery, it makes sense to use some of it to grab people’s attention and showcase your product at the same time. Consider the quick and dirty mockup below:

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Now we have a clear point of focus! There’s a big attractive picture near the top of the page screaming for attention. I imagine this as a jQuery image slider that cycles between featured downloads. This allows you to showcase a lot of content in a relatively small space.

Notice that I also included the suggestions from above. Everything here, with the exclusion of the “next” button, strongly adheres to the alignment of the main grid. More importantly, there’s a nice big message informing people that you’re giving away free premium content. This immediately informs visitors that you have something of value that you’d like to share with them.

On each page you design always try to imagine that you’re seeing it for the first time. Would you know what the site is? Would you want to stick around? Ask a few people around you to take a look without telling them about the site and then ask a few questions about anything that you feel should be obvious from a user’s perspective.

Also pay close attention to whether or not you’re making a value statement. Like it or not, the Internet is a fiercely competitive place and if you want traffic to come to your site you have to become a salesman. A designer’s job is to sell the site in under a second. This almost always takes a bold statement, whether through words image or both.

What’s your statement?

Your Turn!

Now that you’ve read my comments, pitch in and help out by giving the designer some further advice. Let us know what you think is great about the design and what you think could be stronger. As always, we ask that you also be respectful of the site’s designer and offer clear constructive advice devoid of any harsh insults.

Interested in having your own site critiqued? You can find out more here.

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CSS Design: Launchlist

July 24, 2010 08:00:00

An interesting tool to help developers launching a new site ensure that they have covered all the bases.

The UI design is really great, the typography is beautiful and the animated cloudy background is perfect.





This design was featured on the 24th July 2010 . It falls under the category of Design, and has a layout style of Other.

If youd like, you can visit this site, or view all our other featured designs.



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CSS Design: Nirvana

July 24, 2010 08:00:00

Nirvana is a good looking project management tool with a high focus on productivity.

The site layout is simple and clean and communicates its message ver effectively.

The icons are nice, the layout is solid and the blue and black color scheme feels professional.





This design was featured on the 24th July 2010 . It falls under the category of Software, and has a layout style of Three Column.

If youd like, you can visit this site, or view all our other featured designs.



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BHX2

July 24, 2010 07:12:41

CSSREMIX » BHX2 (http://bhx2.tumblr.com/)
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75.cl.cz

July 24, 2010 07:12:29


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#musicfortoday Anthony Seeha - Green Hill Zone Cover (LIVE!)

July 24, 2010 05:05:23



#musicfortoday Anthony Seeha - Green Hill Zone Cover (LIVE!)

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Answer: have you ever seen a nun get beaten or killed for not...

July 24, 2010 04:50:01



Answer: have you ever seen a nun get beaten or killed for not wearing her coverings? 

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davidporter: Is the West Coast happier? I suspect it’s in part...

July 23, 2010 22:51:42



davidporter:

Is the West Coast happier?

I suspect it’s in part that tweeting New Yorkers (and perhaps others on the East Coast) tend to be a bit more cynical and less optimistic, at least in language, than their counterparts.

We have worse weather. Don’t need a graph to know that. 

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50 Fantastically Clever Logos

July 23, 2010 18:16:40

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I know everybody and their brother does logo roundups so you’re probably sick of them, but I don’t believe I’ve ever done one and there is a particularly impressive brand of logo design that I wanted to point out.

Today we’ll look at 50 logos that are the result of going beyond the typical thought process and injecting a little wit and hidden symbolism into the design process.

Like the article? Be sure to subscribe to our RSS feed and follow us on Twitter to stay up on recent content.

What Makes a Logo Clever?

To explain what I mean by “clever” logo design, let’s take a look at a typical logo, (i.e. one that isn’t clever).

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The logo above is a nice piece of work. The colors are perfect, the lettering is masculine, the overall feel is athletic and the glossy effect works well. It’s everything that it needs to be.

However, my favorite type of logo design is that which takes the assignment one step further. Rather than just making something attractive, these designers look at the design process with a pinch of added intelligence and a perspective that skewed enough to see things differently than the rest of the world.

These types of logos make you smile at the brilliance of both the idea and the execution and have several layers of meaning that can hit you in waves. Some are amazing in their obviousness to all who see them and some find excellence in hidden secrets.

I’ve broken down this collection into three categories: visual double entendres (two things in one), word and character art, and ambigrams. Ambigrams definitely also fall into the word art category but I wanted to give them special recognition because they’re so difficult to pull off effectively (if you don’t believe me, try to make one!).

Visual Double Entendres

Lion Bird

If you stare straight at the bird’s feet for a second, a stunningly clear lion’s face emerges. Brilliant design!

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Chad 2010

I love this one. There’s a sort of ribbon theme that makes both a face and the continent of Africa.

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Spartan

Simply beautiful use of negative space. The golfer and his swing double as a soldier’s face.

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DesignTent

A tent and a pencil.

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Pepperhorn

A pepper and a horn.

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GreenLabs

Green here is symbolized by a tree and labs is represented by the brain. That’s a sharp looking tree brain!

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Airtistic

Another pencil idea very similar to the one above. This one is a parachute and a pencil.

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Ecotaste

A tongue and a leaf. A little creepy but a great idea!

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Guitarshop

The letter “G” and a guitar. Simple but effective.

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Mr. Couch

This is definitely one of my favorites. The couch has cleverly been crafted to also be a face with a mustache. Excellent work!

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Eco Pup

The dog’s ears are leaves. Sometimes subtle is better.

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Mailhouse

The open envelope creates a house shape.

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WordRefuge

The open book makes a tent. Not my favorite but it makes for a good visual read.

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Australian Pork

This one makes me laugh. Australia has been turned into a pig’s snout!

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MetroMobile

The city skyline doubles as a row of cell phones.

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PokerHills

I love that the shape of the hills genuinely matches the shape that cards make when you peak at them while they lie face down on the table.

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Match

This one goes on and on. The matches come together to make a heart. There are two of them (they match). Fire represents passion. etc. etc.

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ThinkTank

Ideas are often represented by lightbulbs. Turning the phrase “think tank” into a lightbulb tank was genius.

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Rockit

This one is an excellent piece of art. The rocket blasting off and leaving smoke trails clearly makes a guitar shape.

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Suitcase

This one is simple but so incredibly effective. It looks like both a suitcase and a folded dress shirt with a tie. The latter really emphasizes the “suit” aspect and therefore represents professionalism.

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AirTime

Another really subtle double entendre. The hands on the clock make an airplane.

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Uptown

The buildings in the city skyline are all arrows pointing upward.

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Country Living Dentistry

The white picket fence is a perfect picture of country life, here it’s been turned into a toothbrush to symbolize dentistry.

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Push the Bottle

Another excellent use of negative space. The hand pushing a button makes the shape of a bottle. Notice how the fingers of the fist create the liquid in the bottle.

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Pencil

It’s amazing how little had to be added to make a pencil appear (just a triangle!). Some logo designers really have a gift for simple touches that change everything.

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Spice Mountain

It definitely looks like both a mountain and a pile of spices.

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Night Golf

Not only does the round shape of the golf ball reflect that of the moon, the little dips look like craters! A great visual simile.

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Maritime Law

The logo says everything it needs to. Scales are a clear representation of law and justice and the bowls have been turned into boats to represent the maritime aspect.

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GradBooks

This idea seems a little obvious but I’m sure it took a lot of tweaking to get to this point.

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Antisocial Network

The sort of abstract skyline design is a cliche for community and has been transformed into a familiar hand gesture.

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Mars

Another one of my favorites. The carrot has been beautifully crafted to make a rocket ship.

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Nurd

The car’s headlights make it look like a big nerd with glasses. Yet another example of the use of subtlety in wit.

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Bananas Films

The film strips have been hung to mirror the shape of a group of bananas.

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Food Writers

The negative space in the tip of the old style fountain pen has been turned into a spoon.

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SparkPlug Creations

This is definitely not the best logo in the world, but the whole lightbulb spark plug idea is pretty clever.

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Word and Symbol Art

Fish

The word fish has been crafted into the form of a fish. What more could you want in a logo?

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Bipolar

A few simple typographic characters that perfectly represent the word below.

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CodeFish

Coding is all about characters so it was perfect to build the fish out of typography.

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Inequality

The equality symbol has been slightly modified so that the bottom is shorter than the top; a perfect statement of inequality.

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Fuel Quoter

The quote has been simply turned on its side and it looks remarkably like a gas pump.

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Infinity Crime Studio

The symbol for infinity has been altered to look like pair of mischievous eyes.

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Octave

If you’re at all familiar with music theory you know that an octave has eight notes (hence “oct”). Here the “o” and “c” have been stacked to make an eight.

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Nosey

The impressive part here is how naturally the word seems to make a face. It’s an excellent designer that makes complex ideas look effortless.

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Twins

The two has been pushed over to look like an “n.” Since the word is “twins,” hiding a two in the logo was a great decision.

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Upside Down

This one you have to stare at for a second to really appreciate. All the letters are upside down. The “w” is an “m”, the “d” is a “p”, etc.

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Spork

The obvious solution was to make a spoon and a fork illustration. However, putting the ampersand in represents an extra step in the thought process that makes the idea really unique.

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Umbrella

At first glance this logo says “brella.” Can you spot the other two letters?

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Ambigrams

In case you’ve never heard of them before, ambigrams are words or phrases that you can spin around 180 degrees and still read them. They often require quite a bit of work and thought in order to make them easily readable.

Awesome

That sort of Old English look is definitely one of the styles you see the most with ambigrams. Notice how the “e” and “o” have been heavily transformed but still read well in the context of the word as a whole.

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Edge

It’s not easy to create an “e” that still looks like an “e” when you spin it around. Well done.

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Eveva

This one feels like an ambigram, but as one astute commenter pointed out, it actually isn’t. The beginning “e” and ending “a” are the same, but the letters in between don’t work when flipped. Nice illusion regardless!

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Conclusion

I hope the collection above isn’t just another “list post” but instead is a healthy dose of inspiration that encourages you to put a little thought into your logo creation process. When appropriate, consider how you can infuse something unique and witty to make the logo that much better.

Leave a link below and tell us your favorites. Also point us to any logos that match this style that you’ve seen on the web.

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Tanya Johnston

July 23, 2010 14:59:09

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Wow – Canadian Tanya Johnston has a really unique style that’s awash with otherworldly beauty……

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40 Professional and Detailed Web Layout PSD Templates

July 23, 2010 14:43:57

“It has become increasingly difficult to to find and to freely download high quality and creative PSD web templates, with more and more of the best resources opting for the premium membership route.”

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Elmo Tide

July 23, 2010 14:34:58

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Wow, some really inspiring black and white photography on this Flickr photostream – don’t know much about him, but loving Elmo Tide’s wonderfully dark, provocative images….

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Steven Burke

July 23, 2010 14:26:33

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German born, France based illustrator, Steven Burke, has had the privilege of working with the brilliant Takashi Murakami – we adore his ‘Poor Little Trees’ project….

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The 7 Sins of Managing Web Projects

July 23, 2010 14:23:00

“Some problems and challenges on the other hand, rear their head time after time, and I have classified these in line with the 7 deadly sins, renaming them of course as the 7 sins of managing web projects.”

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300+ Free Grunge Textures

July 23, 2010 14:02:40

“In this roundup we’ve collected over 300 free grunge textures. Enjoy the show!”

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Brandon Schaefer

July 23, 2010 13:55:46

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Some brilliant illustration work from Massachusetts’ Brandon Schaefer – in particular his brilliant ‘Film Re-Designs’ series….

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