How to Create an Enjoyable Web Page Design

Written by Lala C. Ballatan


Continued from page 1

Having readable pages are important – Avoid dark colored backgrounds and heavily patterned pages in your site. This tends to make your text confusing and hard to ready. Most visitors do not find it enjoyable to spend time in a Web site that they have difficulty deciphering. This also goes with small sized texts and very large texts where text that is too large can make it appear as if you are screaming at your viewers.

Technical jargons are a no-no – avoidrepparttar use of technical jargons that will just be ignored by readers. Make your users understand you and you will be able to connect with your target audience.

Create templates for consistency – allrepparttar 132208 elements in your site is guaranteed to be consistent if you provide a template. Havingrepparttar 132209 navigation system and all common elements inrepparttar 132210 same place throughout your site is a great help. It makes it easier for your visitors to find information, and enjoy their experience. Having a template for you to work from makes creating new pages easier.

Use CSS style sheets – to have your users be instructed easily on how to getrepparttar 132211 contents of your page userepparttar 132212 Cascading Style Sheets (CSS). There are several typographical information that you’ll found in CSS such as fonts, font size, colors, and spacing.

Frames are not advisable – in dividingrepparttar 132213 Web page into multiple windows, some designers use frames as a technique. The reasons for not using them tend to outweighrepparttar 132214 reasons to use them since several browsers still do not support frame sites. Search engine optimization is affected then. It is best to create non-frames site first and then see if frames adds any functionality that your visitors would miss.

These elements are basic principles that any designer must live by. By remembering them, you will find even more reasons to enjoy brandishing your skills in Web design and make users enjoy your Web pages, too. -30-

For comments and inquiries aboutrepparttar 132215 article visit http://www.ucreative.com

Lala C. Ballatan is a 26 year-old Communication Arts graduate. Book reading has always been her greatest passion -- mysteries, horrors, psycho-thrillers, historical documentaries and classics. Her writing prowess began as early as she was 10 years old in girlish diaries. With writing, she felt freedom – to express her viewpoints and assert it, to bring out all concerns -- imagined and observed, to bear witness.


On Copying and Stealing Designs

Written by Lala C. Ballatan


Continued from page 1

The second level explains thatrepparttar best resources where designers can steal are from themselves. They can tap into loads of their past designs that were never used or completed, or from their designs that have already been successful in order to reinvent a new design. This kind of stealing is quite helpful in molding their own distinctive design style to use as a selling point for clients. The third level involves stealing from discreet sources. Albert Einstein is noted for quoting, “The secret to creativity is knowing how to hide your sources.” For designersrepparttar 132205 easiest way to do this is to use sources already hidden. Even great artists can’t be accused of stealing if their rare jewels of inspiration are from lost, bypassed, forgotten ideas which they have successfully incorporated with their own distinctive style. To graphic designers, they have to really research and rummage forrepparttar 132206 necessary unused and forgotten ideas applicable for their design.

One must be careful in copying from well-known sources, though. It is best to copyrepparttar 132207 inspiration and notrepparttar 132208 exact output. To fully summarize, all graphid designers out there, there’s no problem in copying, even Picasso, in one of his quotes told aboutrepparttar 132209 necessity of copying. However, it is best to be careful in what you copy and how you copy it. -30-

For comments and inquiries aboutrepparttar 132210 article visit http://www.ucreative.com

Lala C. Ballatan is a 26 year-old Communication Arts graduate. Book reading has always been her greatest passion -- mysteries, horrors, psycho-thrillers, historical documentaries and classics. Her writing prowess began as early as she was 10 years old in girlish diaries. With writing, she felt freedom – to express her viewpoints and assert it, to bring out all concerns -- imagined and observed, to bear witness.


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